HRMGT REVIEWER (Chapter Forecasting and Planning
HRMGT REVIEWER (Chapter Forecasting and Planning
A. invertible
matrix
B. transitional
matrix
C. definite
matrix
D. task role
matrix
E. orthogonal
matrix
Refer to the following hypothetical transitional matrix of the general HR department in a
large manufacturing organization.
8. How many of the total HR assistant managers employed in 2012 were promoted to the
HR manager position in 2013?
A. 95
%
B. 9
%
C. 5
%
D. 86
%
E. 10
%
9. From which of the following job categories was no employee promoted in 2013?
A. HR
assistant
B. HR
administrator
C. HR
practitioner
D. HR
coordinator
E. HR
officer
10. There were demotions from the _____ job category.
A. HR
assistant
B. HR
administrator
C. HR
practitioner
D. HR
coordinator
E. HR
officer
11. How many of the HR practitioners employed in 2012 were promoted to the category of
HR officer in 2013?
A. 2
%
B. 10
%
C. 5
%
D. 13
%
E. 8
%
12. Which of the following job categories saw the highest percent of its employees leave the
organization in 2013?
A. HR
assistant
B. HR
coordinator
C. HR
practitioner
D. HR
administrator
E. HR
officer
13. Which of the following is true about transitional matrices?
A. Transitional matrices can be read across rows but cannot be read from top
to bottom.
B. Transitional matrices provide a comparison of the proportion of workers in protected
subgroups with the proportion that each subgroup represents in the relevant labor
market.
C. Transitional matrices provide an objective measure of the effectiveness of an
organization's human resource recruitment policy.
D. Transitional matrices are extremely useful for charting historical trends in a
company's supply of labor.
E. Transitional matrices show the increase in productivity of employees over a
period of time.
14. The goals that are set in the human resource planning process should come directly
from:
A. to make sure that employees are held accountable for achieving the
stated goals.
B. to ascertain whether or not the company has successfully avoided any potential labor
surpluses or shortages.
C. to collect data about current employees, measure their performances, and compare it
with global standards in order to get a better idea of the firm's international
competence.
D. to focus attention on a problem and provide a benchmark for determining the relative
success of any programs aimed at redressing a pending labor shortage or surplus.
E. to predict areas within the organization where there will be future labor shortages
or surpluses.
16. Due to a series of resignations from the organization, Zylon Inc., a large software firm is
facing an acute labor shortage. During which of the following human resource planning
steps would the firm contemplate several options to address the labor issue?
A. Downsizin
g
B. Demotio
ns
C. Early
retirement
D. Pay
reduction
E. Temporary
employees
18. Which of the following options is considered a fast option for reducing an expected labor
surplus but results in high human suffering?
A. Early
retirement
B. Retrainin
g
C. Hiring
freeze
D. Natural
attrition
E. Demotio
ns
19. Which of the following options for avoiding an expected labor shortage has the benefit of
being a fast solution with high revocability?
A. Temporary
employees
B. Technological
innovation
C. Turnover
reductions
D. New external
hires
E. Retrainin
g
20. Which of the following options for avoiding an expected labor shortage is a slow solution
and has low revocability?
A. Overtim
e
B. Temporary
employees
C. Retrained
transfers
D. Technological
innovation
E. Outsourci
ng
21. _____ is considered a slow option for avoiding an expected labor shortage but has high
revocability.
A. Natural
attrition
B. Retrained
transfers
C. Outsourci
ng
D. Transfer
s
E. Technological
innovation
22. Which of the following is true of the several options available to reduce expected labor
surplus?
A. Homesourci
ng
B. Downsizin
g
C. Retireme
nt
D. Retrainin
g
E. Work
sharing
24. Each of the following is a relatively fast method to reduce an expected labor surplus
EXCEPT _____.
A. work
sharing
B. retraini
ng
C. pay
reductions
D. demotio
ns
E. transfe
rs
25. Which of the following statements is true about downsizing?
A. The typical organizational response to a surplus of labor has been downsizing, which is
slow but low in human suffering.
B. An organization turns to downsizing only in times of
recession.
C. In firms that are high in research and development intensity, downsizing has been
linked to higher long-term organizational profits.
D. The negative effects of downsizing seem to be reduced in service industries
characterized by high levels of customer contact.
E. Downsizing efforts often fail because employees who survive the purges often become
narrow-minded, self-absorbed, and risk-averse.
26. Which of the following is a method used to reduce an expected labor shortage that is low
on revocability?
A. Overtim
e
B. New external
hires
C. Temporary
employees
D. Outsourci
ng
E. Retrained
transfers
27. Which of the following is most likely to lead to a successful downsizing?
A. Avoiding indiscriminant
reductions
B. Informing employees that they are laid off via
emails
C. Downsizing at
random
D. Avoiding changes in the nature of
work roles
E. Removing the company's long-term
employees first
28. Which of the following best explains why older people approaching retirement age have
no intention of retiring?
A. Many employers want to stay away from the costs of hiring a younger crowd and
refuse to retire the older workers.
B. Older workers typically occupy the best-paid jobs and hence prevent the hiring of
younger workers.
C. Improved health of older people in general, in combination with the decreased
physical labor in many jobs has made working longer a viable option.
D. Employers are ignoring situations where it is more expensive to pay for an older
worker's experience than hire younger employees.
E. Statistical forecasting results have shown that older people are an asset to an
organization's economic strength.
29. Which of the following is NOT one of the forces that draw out an older worker's career?
A. paid
leave
B. job
rotation
C. work
sharing
D. voluntary
attrition
E. transfe
rs
31. Which of the following is a disadvantage of employing temporary workers as a means of
eliminating a labor shortage?
A. The use of temporary workers adds up to many administrative tasks and financial
burdens associated with being the "employer of record."
B. Temporary workers pose no threat to current employees, which makes the overall
environment less competitive.
C. The low levels of commitment to the organization and its customers that temporary
workers bring with them often reduces the level of customer loyalty.
D. Many temporary agencies train employees prior to sending them over to employers,
which often means that the company has to retrain them in accord with its own
standards.
E. Because temporary workers have little experience in the host firm, the objective
perspective they bring is of no value.
32. Which of the following is true about temporary workers?
A. homesourci
ng
B. co-
sourcing
C. reshorin
g
D. telecommuti
ng
E. offshorin
g
35. Is the argument that "call center" staffing is the only type of work being offshored valid?
A. No, because countries to where jobs are being offshored are facing a shortage of
skilled labor and are refusing "call center" jobs.
B. Yes, because the level of education and infrastructure does not support high-end
support jobs like reading X-rays and other medical tests.
C. Yes, because the state of online security and privacy is less advanced in
developed countries.
D. No, because figures have shown that countries like China and India are trying to climb
the skill ladder of available work.
E. Yes, because in order to maintain employment rates in their own countries, companies
avoid offshoring jobs.
36. Which of the following is true about offshoring?
A. The smaller and newer a vendor, the better it is for the company to
conduct business.
B. Small overseas upstarts do not take risks that larger, more established
contractors take.
C. Any work that is proprietary and requires tight security should be
offshored.
D. A company should avoid outsourcing work that is self-contained and does not need an
exchange of information.
E. Small overseas upstarts often promise more than they
can deliver.
37. When a company faces a shortage of employees in the work force, and it predicts that
current demand for products or services may not extend to the future, it will:
A. work sharing
culture
B. demotio
n
C. furloug
h
D. layo
ff
E. suspensio
n
39. The programs developed in the strategic-choice stage of the process are put into
practice in the _____ stage.
A. forecasti
ng
B. program-
implementation
C. goal-
setting
D. evaluati
on
E. program
feedback
40. A critical aspect of the program implementation step of human resource planning is:
A. evaluate
results
B. set goals and
objectives
C. formulate
strategies
D. establish forecasting
methods
E. implement recruiting
methods
42. The process of determining whether there are any subgroups whose proportion in a
given job category within a company is substantially different from their proportion in
the relevant labor market is called _____.
A. adverse treatment
analysis
B. workforce utilization
review
C. subgroup
reconciliation
D. discrimination
analysis
E. leading
indicator
43. Which of the following is the accurate definition of workforce utilization review?
A. Ethnocraci
es
B. Group
rights
C. Affirmative action
plans
D. T-test
techniques
E. Employment background
checks
45. _____ is the practice or activity carried on by an organization with the primary purpose of
identifying and attracting potential employees.
A. Human resource
recruitment
B. Applicant tracking
system
C. Customer relationship
management
D. Sensitivity
training
E. Customer experience
transformation
46. _____ is a generic term used to refer to organizational decisions that affect the nature of
the vacancies for which people are recruited.
A. Budgetary
policies
B. Personnel
policies
C. Judicial
policies
D. Fiscal
policies
E. Monetary
policies
47. Policies that state that either party in an employment relationship can terminate that
relationship at any time, regardless of cause, are called _____.
A. due process
policies
B. employment-at-will
policies
C. counter cyclical hiring
policies
D. employee liability
policies
E. affirmative action
policies
48. A policy that lays out the steps an employee can take to appeal a termination decision is
called a(n) _____.
A. premium-wage
approach
B. free-rider
effect
C. lead-indicator
approach
D. lead-the-market
approach
E. first-mover
advantage
51. Sometimes, organizations advertise just to promote themselves as a good place to work
in general. This is called _____.
A. product
advertising
B. image
advertising
C. informative
advertising
D. proactive
advertising
E. subliminal
advertising
52. Which of the following is an example of image advertising?
A. It is a good way to strengthen one's own company, while weakening one's competitors
at the same time, because it increases diversity.
B. It generates a sample of applicants who are well known to
the firm.
C. The applicants are relatively less knowledgeable about the company's vacancies and
are hence easily trainable.
D. Because of the applicants' lack of knowledge about a particular position, their
expectations are easy to meet.
E. It results in a workforce whose members all think alike and who therefore are more
suited to innovation.
54. _____ are people who apply for a vacancy without prompting from the organization.
A. Internal
employees
B. Direct
applicants
C. Referral
s
D. Poached
employees
E. Virtual
employees
55. Ron works as a sale executive for Janus Inc., a large manufacturer of turbocharged
engines. He hears about a vacancy for sales manager at Ios Inc., a competitor in the
same industry, and sends in his résumé requesting Ios to consider him for the vacancy.
Ron is an example of a(n) _____.
A. poached
employee
B. virtual
employee
C. internal
employee
D. referr
al
E. direct
applicant
56. _____ are people who are prompted to apply for a job by someone within the
organization.
A. Direct
applicants
B. Internal
employees
C. Boomerang
employees
D. Referral
s
E. Virtual
employees
57. Jack is a maintenance supervisor at a large petroleum refinery in Texas. His friend,
Ronald, who works at another refinery in Louisiana, informs Jack about a vacancy for a
maintenance manager's position at the Louisiana refinery and asks him to apply for the
position. Jack is an example of a(n) _____.
A. referr
al
B. direct
applicant
C. virtual
employee
D. internal
employee
E. poached
employee
58. Which of the following best exemplifies the process of self-selection?
A. Most job sites do not return with quick results, which can be frustrating for
an applicant.
B. The sheer size and lack of differentiation between candidates listed
on the site.
C. Job sites offer lackluster customer service, which is a huge disappointment for
applicants.
D. Most job sites post jobs that are completely unrelated to an employee's expertise
and job interest.
E. While they promise excellent service, the exuberant service charges discourage
applicants from using job sites.
61. The _____ requires that everyone receiving unemployment compensation be registered
with a local state employment office.
A. Social Security
Act
B. Employers Liability
Act
C. Worker Adjustment and Retraining
Notification Act
D. Protection of Employment
Regulations
E. Equal Pay
Act
62. Executive search firms (ESFs):
A. Warmth and
informativeness
B. Race and
qualifications
C. Age and
experience
D. Gender and
warmth
E. Experience and
qualifications
65. Which of the following actions is most likely to enable organizations to increase the
impact that recruiters have on those they recruit?