BBM 311 Human Resource Management Module
BBM 311 Human Resource Management Module
DEPARTMENT OF MANAGEMENT
COURSE OUTLINE
Purpose: To introduce learners to the field of human resource management by exposing them to
the key areas
Course Content:
Lesson 1: Organizational assessment and human resource planning;
Definition of Human Resource Management
Management functions of Human Resource Management
Operative functions of Human Resource Management
Challenges of Modern Human Resource Management
CAT
Instructional Materials and Equipment: Projector; test books; design catalogues; computer
laboratory; design software; simulators
Course Assessment
Examination - 70%; Continuous Assessment Test (CATS) - 20%; Assignments - 10%; Total -
100%
TABLE OF CONTENTS
COURSE OUTLINE ...................................................................................................................... 2
LESSON ONE .............................................................................................................................. 10
ORGANIZATIONAL ASSESSMENT AND HUMAN RESOURCE PLANNING ................... 10
1.1 DEFINITION OF HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT ................................................ 11
1.2: MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIVE FUNCTIONS: ......................................................... 12
1.3 THE ROLE OF THE HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGER ................................................... 15
1.4 CHALLENGES OF MODERN HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT .......................... 15
LESSON TWO ............................................................................................................................. 19
JOB ANALYSIS........................................................................................................................... 19
2.1 THE NATURE OF JOB ANALYSIS..................................................................................... 19
2.2 USES OF JOB ANALYSIS INFORMATION ....................................................................... 20
2.3 STEPS IN JOB ANALYSIS ................................................................................................... 22
2.4 METHODS OF COLLECTING JOB ANALYSIS INFORMATION ................................... 23
2.5 WRITING JOB DESCRIPTIONS .......................................................................................... 28
LESSON THREE.......................................................................................................................... 32
HUMAN RESOURCE PLANNING AND RECRUITMENT ..................................................... 32
3.1 EMPLOYMENT PLANNING AND FORECASTING ......................................................... 33
3.2 EFFECTIVE RECRUITING .................................................................................................. 37
3.3 FINDING INTERNAL CANDIDATES................................................................................. 40
3.4 OUTSIDE SOURCES OF CANDIDATES ............................................................................ 42
LESSON FOUR ............................................................................................................................ 45
EMPLOYEE TESTING AND SELECTION ............................................................................... 45
4.0: INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................. 45
4.1 WHY CAREFUL SELECTION IS IMPORTANT ................................................................ 45
4.2 BASIC TESTING CONCEPTS.............................................................................................. 46
4.3 INTERVIEWING CANDIDATES ......................................................................................... 48
LESSON FIVE.............................................................................................................................. 60
PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL AND MANAGEMENT.......................................................... 60
5.1 PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT ..................................................................................... 61
5.2 THE PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL REVIEW PROCESS ................................................ 63
LESSON ONE
Lesson Objectives
By the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
a) Answer the question “What is Human Resource Management?”
b) Describe the various management and operative functions of Human Resource
Management
c) Discuss the components of the changing environment of Human Resource
Management.
1.0 Introduction
At one time in history, “Liking people” appeared to be sufficient for choosing to work in the
field of known as “Human Resources (or Personnel) Management. Preferring to work with
humans rather than objects is still important; but it is grossly insufficient in these modern times.
Human Resource Management one of our most complex and challenging fields of endeavor. Not
only the firm’s requirements for an effective work force be met, the human resource manager
must be greatly concerned with the expectations of both employees and society in general.
Society at large has proclaimed it human resources to have vital needs that move beyond a ‘work
force’ status. The employee is simultaneously an instrument of the firm, a human being, and a
citizen.
In this first lesson of the course, we discuss the definition of human resource management, and
look closely at the major components of the definition. We also discuss the major challenges
facing the modern human resource manager.
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Planning: Effective managers realize that a substantial portion of their time should be devoted to
planning. For the human resource manager, planning means the determination in advance of a
human resource program that will contribute to goals establishment will involve the active and
enlightened participation of the human resource manager, with his or her expertise in the area of
human resources.
Organizing: After a course of action has been determined, an organization must be established
to carry it out. An organization is a means to an end. Once it has been determined that certain
human resource functions contribute toward the firm’s objectives, the human resource manager
must form an organization by designing the structure of relationships among jobs, human
resource and physical and physical factors. One must be aware of the complex relationship that
exists between the specialized unit and the rest of the organization. Because of increasing
expertise in this function, much top management are looking to the human resource manager for
advice in the general organization of the enterprise.
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Directing: At least in theory, we now have a plan and an organization to execute that plan. It
might appear that the next logical function would be that of operation, doing the job. But it has
been found that a “starter” function is becoming increasingly necessary. In our above definition
this function was labeled “direction”, but it may be called by other names, such as “motivation”,
“actuation”, or “command”. At any rate a considerable number of difficulties are involved in
getting people to go to work willingly and effectively.
Controlling: Now, at last, the human resource functions are being performed. But what is the
management duty at this point? It is logical that its functions should be that of control that is the
observation of action and its comparison with plans and the correction of any deviations that may
occur, or at times, the realignment of plans and their adjustment to unchangeable deviations.
Control is the managerial function concerned with regulating activities in accordance with the
personnel plan, which in turn was formulated on the basis of an analysis of fundamental
organization goals.
Procurement: This first operative function of human resource management is concerned with
obtaining of the proper kind and number of personnel necessary to accomplish organization
goals. It deals specifically with such subjects as the determination of human resources
requirements and their recruitment, selection and placements. The determination of human
resource required must rest upon a prior design of job duties, a decision that is increasingly being
affected by the human resource manager’s objective of meeting human society’s requirements
often affects procurement programs in the forms of affirmative action and equal opportunity. The
actual hiring process entails a multitude of activities designed to screen personnel, such as
reviewing application forms, psychological testing, checking references and conducting
interviews.
Development: After personnel have been obtained, they must be to some degree developed.
Development has to do with the increase of skill, through training, that is necessary for proper
job performance. This is an activity of very great importance and will continue to grow because
of the changes in technology, the realignment of jobs and the increasing complexity of the
managerial task.
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Integration: With the employee procured, developed and reasonably compensated, there follows
one of the most difficult and frustrating challenges to management. The definition labels this
problem “integration”. It is concerned with the attempt to effect a reasonable reconciliation of
individual, societal and organizational interest. It rests upon a foundation of belief that
significant overlapping of interests so exist in our society. Consequently, we must deal with the
feelings and attitudes of personnel in conjunction with the principles and policies of
organizations.
Maintenance: If we have executed the foregoing functions well, we now have a wiling and able
work force. Maintenance is concerned with the perpetuation of this state. The maintenance of
willingness is heavily affected by communications with employees. The physical condition of
the employees should also be maintained.
Separation: If the first function of human resource management is to secure the employee, it is
logical that the last should be the separation and return of that person to society. Most people so
not die on the job. The organization is responsible for meeting certain requirements of due
process in separation, as well as assuring that the returned citizen is in good shape as possible.
Types of separation are as retirement, layoff, out-placement and discharge.
The purpose of all the activity outlined above, both managerial and operative, is to assist in the
accomplishment of basic objectives. Consequently, the starting point of human resource
management, as of all management, must be a specification of those objectives and a
determination of the sub-objectives of the human resource function. The expenditure of all funds
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in the personnel area can be justified only insofar as there is a net contribution toward basic
goals. For the most part these are goals of the particular organization concerned. But as
suggested earlier, society is tending to impose human goals upon the private business enterprise,
goals that may or may not make an immediate contribution to an organization’s particular
objective.
Most expert agree that there are five basic functions all managers perform: planning, organizing,
staffing, leading and controlling. In the total these functions represent the management process.
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There is growing evidence that the work is declining in favor of a more existential view of life.
Instead of organizations providing the basic guides to living persons are responsible for
exploring and determining for themselves what they want to do and become. With this
philosophy, work becomes only one alternative among many as a means for becoming a whole
person in order to do one’s own thing”. Family activities, leisure, avocations and assignments in
government churches and schools are equally viable means through which a person can find
meaning and become self-actualized. The absolute worth of the individual is a value which is
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merged with the concept that all people are members of the great human family. Concerning
specifics, full employment gives way to the full life. Climbing the organization ladder of success
for its accompanying materialistic symbols becomes less important than self-expression through
a creative accomplishment. Private lives outside the job and firm are relatively autonomous,
accompanied by an increasing reluctance to sacrifice oneself or one’s family for the good of the
organization. Quality of life is preferred to quantity, equity to efficiency, diversity to conformity
and the individual to the organization.
With respect to an increasing emphasis upon the individual as compared with the organization, a
number of changes in personnel programs have been tried. Attempts have been made to redesign
jobs to provide challenging activities that needs of the human ego.
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Review Questions
i) Identify and distinguish the four managerial functions and the six
operative functions of human resource management.
ii) With more females in the workforce, what major changes are
introduced into our society?
iii) Explain the challenges of modern human resource management.
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LESSON TWO
JOB ANALYSIS
Lesson Objectives
By the end of this lesson the student should be able to:
a) Discuss the nature of job analysis, including what it is and how it is used.
b) Use at least three methods of collecting job analysis information, including
interviews, questionnaires and observation.
c) Explain what Job Analysis is.
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Human behaviours: The specialist may also collect information about human behaviors
like sensing; communicating, deciding and writing. Included here would be information
regarding job demands such as lifting weights or walking long distances.
Machines, tools, equipment and work aids: This category includes information regarding
tools used, materials processed and knowledge dealt with or applied (such as finance or
law) and services rendered (such as counseling or repairing).
Performance standards: The employer may also want information about the job’s
performance standards (in term of quantity or quality levels for each job duty, for
instance). Management will use these standards to appraise employees.
Job context: Included here is information about such matters as physical working
conditions, work schedule and the organizational and social context – for instance, the
number of people with whom the employee would normally interact. Information
regarding incentives might also be included here.
Human Requirements: This includes information regarding the job’s human
requirements, such as job-related knowledge or skills (education, training, work
experience) and required personal attributes (aptitudes, physical characteristics,
personality, interests).
Job Description
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Recruitment and Selection: Job analysis provides information about what the job entails and
what human characteristics are required to perform these activities. This information, in the form
of job description and specifications, helps management decide what sort of people to recruit and
hire.
Compensation; Job analysis information is crucial for estimating the value of each job and is
appropriate compensation. Compensation (such as salary and bonus) usually depends on the
job’s required skill and level, safety hazards, degree of responsibility and so on – all factors you
can assess through job analysis. Furthermore, many employers group jobs into classes (say,
secretary III and IV). Job analysis provides the information to determine the relative worth of
each job and thus appropriate class.
Training: The job description should show the activities and skills – and therefore the training –
that the job requires.
Discovery Unassigned Duties; Job analysis can also help reveal unassigned duties. For example,
your company’s production manager says she’s responsible for a dozen or so duties, such as
production scheduling and raw material purchasing. Missing, however, is any reference to
managing raw material inventories? On further study, you learn that none of the other
manufacturing people are responsible for inventory management, either. You know from your
review of other jobs like these that someone should be managing inventories. You’ve uncovered
an essential unassigned duty, thanks to job analysis.
EEO Compliance: job analysis also plays a big role in EEO compliance. Job analysis is a
crucial in validating all major personnel activities. For example 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.
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Step 2: Review relevant background information such as organization charts, process charts and
job descriptions. Organizational charts show the organization wide division of work how the job
in question relates to other jobs and where the job fits in the overall organization. Should also
show distribution of work, with whom the job incumbent communicates. A process chart
provides a more detailed picture of the workflow. It shows the flow of inputs to and outputs from
a particular job being analyzed.
Step 3: Select representative positions. Why? Because there may be too many similar jobs to
analyze. For example, it is usually unnecessary to analyze the jobs of 200 assembly workers
when a sample of 10 jobs will do.
Step 4: Actually analyze the job – by collecting data on job activities, required employee
behaviours, working conditions and human traits and abilities needed to perform the job. For this
step use one or more of the job analysis methods explained later in this lesson.
Step 5: Verify the job analysis information with the worker performing the job and with his or
her immediate supervisor. This will help confirm that the information is factually correct and
complete. This review can help gain the employee’s acceptance of the job analysis data and
conclusions; by giving that person a chance to review and modify your description of the job
activities.
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Step 6: Develop a job description and specification. These are two tangible products of the job
analysis. The job description is a written statement that describes the activities and
responsibilities of the job, as ell as its important features, such as working conditions and safety
hazards. The job specification summarizes the personal qualities, traits skills and background
required for getting the job done. It may be in a separate document or in the same document as
the job description.
Conducting the job analysis usually involves a joint effort by an HR specialist (perhaps an HR
manager, job analyst or consultant) might observe and analyze the job and then develop a job
description and specification. The supervisor and worker may then review and verify the job
analyst’s conclusions regarding the job’s activities and duties. In practice firms usually collect
analysis data from multiple subject matter experts”. (Mostly job incumbents) using
questionnaires and interviews. They then average data from several employees from different
departments to determine how much time a typical employee spend on each of several specific
tasks. The problem is that employees who have the same job title but work in different
departments may have experience very different pressures. Therefore, simply adding up and
averaging the amount of time that, say, HR assistant need to devote to “interviewing candidates”
departmental context: The way someone with a particular job title spends his or her time is not
necessary the same from department to department. The job analysis process begins when the
analyst collects information from the worker and supervisor about the nature of the work and the
specific tasks the worker does.
Interviews, questionnaires, observation and diary/logs are the most popular methods for
gathering job analysis data. They al provide realistic information about what job incumbents
actually do. Managers use them for developing job descriptions and specifications.
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1. The Interview
Managers use three types of interviews to collect job analysis data – individual interviews with
each employee, group interviews with groups of employees who have the same job and
supervisor interviews with one or more supervisors who know the job. They use group
interviews when a large number of employees are performing similar or identical work, since it
can be a quick and inexpensive way to gather information. As a rule, the workers’ immediate
supervisor attends the group session; if not, you can interview the supervisor separately to get
that person’s perspective on the job duties and responsibilities.
Whichever kind of interview you use, you need to be sure the interviewee fuly understands the
reason for the interview, since there’s a tendency for such interviews to be viewed rightly or
wrongly as “efficiency evaluations.” If so interviewees may hesitate to describe to describe their
jobs accurately.
Disadvantages
Distortion of information is the main problem – whether due to outright falsification or honest
misunderstanding. Job analysis is often a prelude a changing of job’s pay rate. Employees
therefore may legitimately view as an efficiency evaluation that may affect their pay. They may
then tend to exaggerate certain responsibilities while minimizing others. Obtaining valid
information can thus be a slow process and prudent analysts get multiple inputs.
Typical Questions
Despite their drawbacks, are widely used. Some typical interview questions include:
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Interview Guidelines
Keep several things in mind when conducting a job analysis interview.
i. First, the job analyst and supervisor should work together to identify the worker who
know the job best – and preferably those who’ll be most objective in describing their
duties and responsibilities.
ii. Second, quickly establish rapport with the interviewee. Know the person’s name, speak
in easily understood language, briefly review the interview’s purpose and explain how
the person was chosen for the interview.
iii. Third, follow a structured guide or checklist, one that lists questions and provides space
for answers. This ensures you’ll identify crucial questions ahead of time and that all
interviews (if there’s more than one) cover all the required questions. (However, also
make sure to give the worker some leeway in answering questions and provide some
open-ended questions like, “was there anything we didn’t cover with our questions?”)
iv. Fourth, when duties are not performed in a regular manner – for instance, when the
worker doesn’t perform the same job over and over and over again many times a day –
ask the worker to list his or her duties in order of importance and frequency or
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occurrence. This will ensure that you don’t overlook crucial but infrequently performed
activities – like a nurses occasional emergency room duties.
v. Finally, after completing the interview, review and verify the data. Specifically, review
the information with the worker’s immediate supervisor and with the interviewee.
2. Questionnaires
Having employees fill out questionnaires to describe their job-related duties and responsibilities
is another good way to obtain job analysis information. You have to decide how structured the
questionnaire should be and what questions to include. Some questionnaires answers are on a
scale e.g. 1 – 5 questionnaires are very structured checklists. Each employee gets an inventory of
perhaps hundreds of specific duties or tasks (such as “change and splice wire”). He or she is
asked to indicate whether or not he or she performs each task and if so how much time is
normally spent on each. At the other extreme the questionnaire can be open-ended and simply
ask the employee to “describe the major duties of your job”.
Person has a lee-way to put in his/her own words whether structures or unstructured,
questionnaires have both pros and cons. A questionnaire is a quick and efficient way to obtain
information from a large number of employees; it’s less costly than interviewing hundred of
workers for instance. However, developing the questionnaire and testing it (perhaps by making
sure the workers understand the questions) can be expensive and time consuming.
Disadvantage is that is is difficult to develop a questionnaire.
3. Observation
Direct observation is especially useful when job consist mainly of observable physical activities
– assembly-line worker and accounting clerk are examples. On the other hand, observation is
usually not appropriate when the job entails a lot of mental activity. (Lawyer design engineer).
Nor is it useful if the employee only occasionally engages in important activities, such as a nurse
who handles emergencies. And reactivity – the worker’s changing what he or she normally does
because you are watching – can also be a problem. Managers often use direct observation and
interviewing together. One approach is to observe the worker on the job during a complete work
cycle. (The cycle is the time it takes to complete the job, it could be a minute for an assembly-
line worker or an hour, a day, or longer for complex jobs). Here you take notes of all the job
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activities. Then, after accumulating as much information as possible, you interview the worker.
Ask the person to clarify points not understand and to explain what other activities he or she
performs that you didn’t observe. You can also observe and interview simultaneously asking
questions while the worker performs his or her job.
4. Participant Diary/Logs
Another approach is to ask workers to keep a diary/log of what they do during the day, for every
activity he or she engages in, the employee records the activity (along with the time) in a log.
(Daily listings made by workers of every activity in which they engage along with the time each
activity takes). This can produce a very complete picture of the job. Especially when
supplemented with subsequent interviews with the worker and the supervisor. The employee, of
course, might try to exaggerate some activities and underplay others. However, the detailed,
chronological nature of the log tends to meditate against this.
Some firms take a high-tech approach to diary/logs. They give employees pocket dictating
machines and pagers. Then at random times during the day, they page the workers, who dictate
what they are doing at that time. This approach can avoid one pitfall of the traditional diary/log
method relying on workers to remember what they did hours earlier when they complete their
logs at the end of the day.
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The problem is the potential inaccuracies in people’s judgments. For example in a group
interview some group members may feel forced to go along with the consensus of the group; or
an employee may be careless about how he or she completes a questionnaire. What this means is
that collecting job analysis data from just interviews or just observations, may leaf to inaccurate
conclusions. It’s better to try to avoid such inaccuracies by using several types of respondents –
groups, individuals, observers, supervisors and analyst, make sure the questions and surveys are
clear and understandable to the respondents. And if possible, observe and question respondents
early enough in the job analysis process to catch any problems while there’s still time to correct
them.
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standard format for writing a job description. However, most descriptions contain sections that
cover:
1. Job Identification
2. Job summary
3. Responsibilities and duties
4. Authority of incumbent
5. Standards of performance
6. Working conditions
7. Job specifications
1. Job Identification; Job identification section contains type of information. The job title
specifies the name of the job, such as supervisor of data processing operations, marketing
manager or inventory control clerk. Date is the date of the job description was actually written
and prepared by indicates who wrote it. There is also space to indicate who approved the
description and perhaps a space that shows the location of the job in terms of its plant/division
and department/section. This section might also include the immediate supervisor’s title and
information regarding salary and/or pay scale. There might also be space for the grade/level of
the job, if there is such a category. For example a firm may classify programmers, programmer
III and so on.
2. Job Summary: The job summary should describe the general nature of the job and includes
only its major functions or activates. Thus the marketing manager “plans, directs and coordinates
the marketing of the organizations products or services.” For the job of materials manager, the
summary might state that the “material necessary on the production line.” For the job of
mailroom supervisor, the mailroom supervisor receives, sorts and delivers all incoming mail
properly and he or she handles all outgoing mail including the accurate and timely posting of
such mail. Include general statements like,’’ perform other assignment as required” with care.
Such statements can give supervisors more flexibility in assigning duties. Some experts,
however, state unequivocally that one item frequently found that should never be included in a
job description is a cop-out clause like other duties, as assigned. Since this leaves open the nature
of the job and the people needed to staff it.
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4. Responsibilities and Duties; This section presents a list of the job’s major responsibilities
and duties. You list each of the job’s major duties separately and describe it I a few sentences.
This section should also define the lists of the jobholder’s authority, including his or her
decision-making authority direct supervision of other personnel and budgetary limitations.
6. Job Specifications; The job specification takes the job description and answers the question;
human traits and experience are required to do this job well?” It shows what kind of persons to
recruit and for what qualities that persons should be tested. The job specification may be a
section of the job description or a separate document entirely.
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Review Questions
i) What is job analysis? How can you make use of the information it provides?
ii) What items are typically included in the job description?
iii) Compare and contrast the methods for collecting job analysis data, explaining
what each is useful for and listing the pros and cons of each.
iv) Explain how you would conduct a job analysis for an educational institution.
v) What items are typically included in the job description? Briefly discuss each of
these items.
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LESSON THREE
Lesson Objectives
By the end of this lesson you should be able to:
a) Explain the main techniques used in employment planning and
forecasting.
b) Name and describe the main internal and outside sources of candidates.
c) Effectively recruit job candidates.
d) Forecast Personnel Needs in an organization.
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5. Finally, decide who to make an offer to, by having the supervisor and (perhaps) others on
the team interview the final candidates.
In the sections that follow, we discuss each of these steps in details.
Each option produces its own set of HR plans. Current employee may require training
development and coaching before they are ready to fill new jobs. Going outside requires
deciding what recruiting sources to use among other things.
Like all good plans, management builds employment plans on premises – basic assumptions
about the future. Forecasting generates these premises. If you’re planning for employment
requirements you’ll usually need to forecast three things Personnel needs, the supply of inside
candidates and the supply of outside candidates.
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A scatter plot shows graphically how two variables- such a measure of business activity and your
firm’s staffing levels- are related. If they are, then if you can forecast the level of business
activity, you should be able to estimate your personnel requirements.
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another option, particularly for the firm’s top positions. They shoe the present performance and
promotability for each position’s potential replacement. As an alternative, you create a card for
each position, showing possible replacements as well as their present performance, promotion
potential and training.
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Skills: Skills such as “graphic designs inter face” (number of times performed, date last
performed, time, spent), as well as skill level, perhaps ranging from level 1 (can lead or instruct
others) to level 3 (has some experience: can assist experienced workers).
In practice the, the data elements could number 100 or more. For example, one vendor of a
package reportedly used by over 2,000 companies suggests 140 elements, ranging from home
address to driver’s license number, weight, salary, sick leave used, skills and veteran status.
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selective you can be in your hiring. If only two candidates apply for two openings, you may have
little choice but to hire them. But if 10 or 20 applicants appear, you can use techniques like
interviews and test to screen out all about all the best.
Effective recruiting is increasingly today, for several reasons. First the ease of recruiting tends to
ebb and flow with economic and unemployment levels. High average turnover rates for some
occupations are another problem; the increased emphasis on technology and therefore on skilled
human capital also demands more selective hiring and thus a bigger applicant pool
Finding the right inducements for attracting and hiring employees can be a problem. Aggressive
recruiting is therefo0re often the name of the game. “Poaching workers is fair game”. Some
recruiters even have their own jargon. They call luring workers away from other high- tech firms
“nerd rustling’.
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50 new hires
150 candidates
interviewed (3:2)
200 candidates
invited (4:3)
Recruiting may bring to mind employment agencies and classified ads, but current employees are
the best source candidates.
Filling open positions with inside candidates has many benefits. First, there’s really no substitute
for knowing a candidate’s strengths and weakness. It is often therefore safer to promote
employees form within, since you’re likely to have a more accurate vies of the person’s skills
than you would an outsiders. Inside candidates may also be more committed to the company.
Morale may rise, to the extent that employees see promotions as rewards for loyalty and
competence. Inside candidates may also require less orientation and training than outsiders.
However hiring from within can also backfire. Employees who apply for jobs and don’t get them
may become disconnected telling unsuccessful applicants why they were rejected and what
remedial actions they might take to be more successful in the future is thus crucial.
Similarly, many employers require managers to post job openings and interview all inside
candidates. Yet the manger often knows ahead of time exactly whom he or she wants to hires.
Requiring the persons to interviews a stream of unsuspecting inside candidates can be a waste of
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time for all concerned. Groups are sometimes not as satisfied when their new boss is appointed
from within their own ranks as when he or she is newcomer: it may be difficult for the insider to
shake off the reputation of being “one of the gang”
Inbreeding is another potential drawback. When all managers come up through the ranks, they
may have a tendency to maintain the status quo, when a new direction is required. Many
“promote from within”. Balancing the benefits to morale and loyalty with the possible inbreeding
problem can be a challenge.
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Today- thanks partly to high turnover in some high-tech occupations rehiring former employees
is back in style.
Rehiring back employees has its pros and cons. On the plus side, former employees are known
quantities (more or less) and are already familiar with the company’s culture, style and ways of
doing things. On the other hand employees who left for greener pastures back into better
positions may signal your current employees that the best way to get ahead is to leave the firm.
In any event, there are several ways to reduce the chance of adverse reactions. For example, once
rehired employees have been back on the job for a certain period, credit them with the benefits
such as vacation time and thereby on morale. In addition, inquire (before rehiring them) about
what they did during the layoff and how they feel about returning to the firm; you don’t want
someone coming back who feels they’ve been mistreated,” said one manager.
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vii. Planned strategic recruitment to fill short-term needs and to provide people to meet future
needs.
viii. Actually filling the positions- via recruiters, promotion from within and so on.
Constructing the ad
Construction of the ad is important. Experienced advertisers use a four point guide called
AIDA(attention, interest, desire, action) to construct ads. You must of course, attract attention to
the ad or readers may just miss or ignore it.
Develop interest in the job. You can create interest by the nature of the job itself, with lines such
as “you’ll thrive on challenging work” you can also use other aspects of the job, such as its
location to create interest.
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Create desire by spotting the job’s interest factors with words such as travel or challenge
Keep your target audience in mind
Finally make sure the prompts action with a at statement like “call today” or “write today for
more information”
Application forms
The filled application form provides information on education,
i. You can make judgments on substantive matters such as level of education experience
ii. Draw conclusions about the applicants previous progress and growth especially for
management candidates
iii. Draw tentative conclusions regarding the applicant’s stability based on previous work
records.
iv. Use the data in the application to predict which candidate will succeed on the job and
which will not
Using application forms to predict job performance
Some organizations use application forms to predict which candidate will be much useful in
much the same way that might use test for screening. They do this by conducting statistical
studies to find relationship between
i) Responses on the application form
ii) Measure s of success on the job
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Review Questions
i) Make a collection of several classified and display ads from any local
newspaper and analyze the effectiveness of these ads using the guidelines
discussed in this lesson.
ii) What are the main things you would do to recruit and retain a more diverse
workforce?
iii) You have been contracted by the Board of Directors of a newly established
private secondary school as a human resource consultant. Your first task is to
come up with a human resource plan detailing the human resource needs and
the process of meeting those needs. Explain the process you would use up with
this plan detailing how you would go about employment planning and
forecasting, and recruiting of candidates. Show how you would make use of the
recruiting yield pyramid.
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LESSON FOUR
Lesson objectives
At the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
a) Describe the overall selection process
b) Explain what is meant by validity and reliability
c) List the main types of selection interviews
d) Explain and illustrates at least six factors that affect the usefulness of interviews
4.0: Introduction
One of the biggest challenges facing firms lies in the process of testing and selection of
employees. A firm that fails to lay emphasis on this process will find itself experiencing a high
employee turnover. The purpose of this lesson is to show you how to use various tools and
techniques to select the best candidates for the job.
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Second, it is important because it’s costly to recruit and hire employees. Third its important
because of the legal implications of incompetent hiring.
Negligent hiring
This is hiring workers with questionable backgrounds without proper safeguards. Negligent
hiring underscores the need to think through what the job’s human requirements really are.
Employers protect against negligent hiring claims by;
o Carefully scrutinizing all information supplied by the applicant on his or her employment
application. For example, look for unexplained gaps in employment
o getting the applicant’s written authorization for reference checks and carefully checking
references
o saving all records and information you obtain about the applicant
o rejecting applicants who make false statements of material facts or who have conviction
records for offences directly related and important to the job in question
o keeping in mind the need to balance the applicant’s privacy rights with others “need to
know”, especially when you discover damaging information
o Taking immediate disciplinary action if problems develop.
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predictor of subsequent performance on their job. A selection test must be valid since, without
proof of validity, there is no logical or legally permissible reason to continue using it to screen
job applicants. In employment testing, there are two main ways to demonstrate a test’s validity:
criterion validity and content validity.
1. Criterion validity
Demonstrating criterion validity means that those who do well on the test also do well on the job
and that those who do poorly on the test do poorly on the job, thus the test has validity to extent
that the people with higher test scores perform better on the job. In psychological measurement,
predictor is the measurement (in this case, the test score) that you are trying to relate to a
criterion, like performance on the job. The term criterion validity reflects that terminology.
2. Content validity
A test that contains a fair sample of the tasks and skills actually needed for the job in question.
Employers demonstrate the content validity of a test by showing that the test constitutes a fair
sample of the content of the job. The basic procedure here is to identify job tasks and behaviors
that are critical to performance and then randomly detect a sample of those tasks and behaviors
to be tested.
Demonstrating content validity sounds easier than it is in practice. Demonstrating that;
i) The tasks the person performs on the test are really a comprehensive and random sample
of the tasks performed on the job.
ii) The conditions under which the person takes the test resemble the work situation, is not
always easy.
For many jobs, employers must demonstrate other evidence of a test’s validity- such as its
criterion validity.
11. Reliability
Is a test’s second important characteristic and refers to its consistency. It is “the consistency of
scores obtained by the same person when retested with the identical tests or with an equivalent
form of a test.” A test’s reliability is very important; if a person scored 90 on an intelligence test
on Monday and 130 when retested on Tuesday, you probably wouldn’t have much faith in the
test.
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There are several ways to estimate consistency or reliability. You could administer the same test
to the same people at two different points in time, comparing their test scores at time 2 with their
scores at time 1; this would be a retest estimate. Or you could administer a test and then
administer what experts believe to be an equivalent test later; this would be an equivalent form
estimate.
A test’s internal consistency is another measure of its reliability. For example, suppose you have
10 items on a test of vocational interest; you believe this measure in various ways, the person’s
interest in working outdoors. You administer the test and then statistically analyze the degree to
which responses to these 10 items vary together. This would provide a measure of the internal
consistency is one reason you find apparently repetitive questions on some test questionnaires.
A number of things could cause a test to be unreliable. For example the questions may do a poor
job of sampling the material; or there might be errors due to changes in the testing conditions
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Interviews can be classified according to the degree to which they are structured. In an
unstructured or nondirective type of interview you ask questions as they come to mind the
interviewer pursues points of interest as they come up in response to questions. There is
generally no set format to follow and the interview can take various directions. While questions
can be specified in advance, they usually are not and there is seldom a formalized guide for
scoring the quality each answer. Interviewees for the same job thus may or may not be asked the
same or similar questions based on the candidate’s last statement and to pursue points of interest
as they develop.
The interview can also be structured. In the classical structured interview, the questions and
acceptable responses are specified in advance and the responses are rated for appropriateness of
content. It is an interview following a set sequence of questions. In practice, however not all
structured interviews go so as to specify acceptable answers.
Structured and no structured interviews each have their pros and cons. With structured interviews
all applicants are generally asked all questions by all interviewers that meet and structured
interviews are generally more valid. Structured interviews can also help interviewers who may
be less comfortable interviewing to ask questions and conduct useful interviews. On the hand,
structured interviews don’t always leave the flexibility to pursue points of interest as they
develop.
In the typical stress interview, the applicant is made uncomfortable by being put on the defensive
by a series of frank and often-discourteous questions from the interviewer. The interviewer might
first probe for weaknesses in the applicant’s background, such as job that the applicant left under
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questionable circumstances. Having identified these, the interviewer can yet focus on them
hoping to get the candidate to lose his or her composure. Thus a candidate for customer
relations’ manager who obligingly mentions having had four jobs in the pat two years might be
told that frequent irresponsible and immature behavior. If the applicant then responds with a
reasonable explanation of why the job changes were necessary, another topic might be pursued.
On the other hand, if the formerly tranquil applicant reacts explosively with anger and disbelief,
this might be taken as a symptom of low tolerance for stress
The stress approach can be a good way to identify hypersensitive applicants who might be
expected to overreact to mild criticism with anger and abuse. On the other hand, the stress
interview’s invasive and ethically questionable nature demands that the interviewers be skilled
on the requirements for the job. This is definitely not an approach for amateur interrogations or
for those without skill to keep the interview under control.
Interviews serve two more purposes in the employment context. An appraisal interview is a
discussions following a performance appraisal in which supervisor and employee discuss the
employee’s rating and possible remedial actions. When an employee leaves a firm for any
reason, exit interview is often conducted. An exit interview usually conducted by the HR
department, aims at eliciting information about the job or related matters that might give the
employer a better insight into what is right or wrong about the company.
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Job-related interviews are those in which the intereviewer attempts to asses the applicant's past
behaviors for job-related information, but most questions are not considered situational. In other
words questions don't revolve around hypothetical situations or scenarios. Instead supposedly
job-related questions (such as „which courses did you like best in business school?“) are asked
in order to draw conclusions about say, the candidate's ability to handle the fanancial aspects of
the job to be filled.
The behavioral interview is gaining in popularity. In a behavioral interview a situation is
described and interviews are asked how they have behaved in the past in such a situation. Thus
while situational interviews ask interviewees to describe how they would react to a situation
today or tomorro, the behavioral interview asks interviewees to describe how they did react to
situations in the past.
Finally, psychological interviews are interviews conducted by a psychological in which
questionor panel s are intended to assess personal traits such as dependabibit. The interview may
use situational job-related or behavioral questions and be eithe structured or unstructed.
Psychological interviews generally have a significatly unstructured element.
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up on the candidate's answers, much as reporters do in press conferences than are normally
produced by a series of one-on-one interviews. On the other hand, some candidates find panel
interviews more stressful and they may actually inhibit reponses. An even more stressful variant
is the mass interview. In a mass interview several candidates are interviewed simultaneously by
apanel. Here the panel poses a problem to be solved and then sits back and watches which
candidate takes the lead in formulating an answer.
Increasingly, interviews aren't administered by people at all but are computerized. A
computerized selection interview is one in which a job candidate's oral and/or computerized
responses are obtained in response to computerized oral, visual or written questions and/or
situations. The basic idea is generally to present the applicant with a sereies of questions
regarding his or her background, experience education, skills, knowledge and work attitudes-
specific questions taht relate to the job for which the person has applied. In a typical
computerized interview the questions arepresented in multi-choice format, one at a time and the
applicant is expected to respond to the questions on the computer screen by pressing a key
corresponding to his or her desired response. For example a sample interview question for a
person applying for a job as a store clerk might be:
How would your supervisor rate your customer service skills?
a. Outstanding
b. Above average
c. Average
d. Below average
e. Poor
Questions on a computerized interview like this come in rapid sequence and require concetration
on the applicant's part. The typical computerized interview then measures the response time to
each question. A delay in answering certain such as “can you be trusted?“ can flag a potential
problem.
Computer-aided interviews are generally used to reject totally unacceptable candidates and to
select those who will move on to a face-to-face interview.
Computer-aided interviews can be very advantageous. Systems like those on-line substantially
reduce the amount of time managers devote to interviewing what often turn out tobe
unacceptable candidates. Applicants are reportedly more honest with computers than they would
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be with people, presumably because computers are not judgemental. The computer can also be
sneaky: if an applicant takes longer than average to answer a quetsion like, 'Have you ever been
caught stealing?“ he or she may be summarily screened out or at least questioned more deeply
in that area by a human interviewer. On the other hand, mechanial nature of computer-aided
interviews can leave applicants with the impression that the prospective emploeyer is rather
impersonal.
How useful are interviews?
The ironic about interviews is that while they're used by virtually all employers, the statistical
evidence regarding theri validity is actually very mixed. Much of the earlier research gave
selection interviews low marks in terms of reliability and validity. However recent studies
indicate that key to an interview's usefulness is the manner in which it is administered.
Specifiacally, the following conclusions are warranted based on one recnet study of interview
validity:
With respect to predicting job performance, situational interviews yield a higher mean
validity than do job-related (or behavioral) interviews, which in turn yield a higher mean
Validity than do psychological interviews. Structured interviews, regardless of content
are more valid than unstructured interviews are more valid than are panel interviews, in
which multiple interviewers provide ratingsin one setting.
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IV .Pressure to hire
Pressure to hire also undermines an interview’s usefulness .For example, a group of managers
was told to assume that they were behind in their recruiting quota .A second group was told that
were ahead of their quota. Those ``behind’’ evaluate recruits much more highly than did those
``ahead ‘’.
VII. Telegraphing
Some interviewers are so anxious to fill a job that they help the applicant respond correctly to
their questions by telegraphing the expected answer .An example might be a question like
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.``This job calls for Handling a lot of stress .You can do that ,can’t you?’’ the telegraphing isn’t
always so obvious .For example interviewer ‘ first impression of candidates [from examining
application blank and test scores ] tend to positively linked to use of a more positive interview
style and vocal on the part of the interviewer .This can translate into sending subtle cues [like a
smile ]regarding what answer is being sought .
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A situational interview may actually contain situation; job –knowledge and ``willingness
‘questions [although the situation questions pose a hypothetical job situation tend to be the most
valid]. Situation question pose a hypothetical job situation ; such as ``job knowledge the job
.These often deal with technical aspects of a job .Willingness questions gauge the applicant ‘s
willingness and motivation to do repetitive physical work to travel , to relocate and so forth .
Step 4: Develop Benchmark Answer. Next develop answer and a five-point rating scale for each
question , with specific answer develop for good [a 5 rating ] ,marginal [a 3rating ] ,and poor [a
1rating ] .
STEP 5: Appoint Interview Panel and Implement .These types interviews are generally conduct
by panel, rather than sequentially. The panel should consist of three to six members, preferable
the same employees who participated in writing the interviews and answer. Panel member may
also be supervisors of the job to be filled, the job incumbent, peers and HR representatives .The
same interview member should be used to interview all candidates for the job.
Before the interview, the job duties, question and benchmark answer are distributed to the panel
members and reviewed Next the panel and to ask all questions of all applicants in this and
succeeding interviews to ensure consistency. However, all panel members record and rate the
applicant’s answer to each question falls relative to the ideal poor, marginal or good answers. At
the end of the interview, each applicant is directed to someone who will explain the follow-up
procedure and answer any question applicant has.
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2. Establish Rapport
The main reason for the interview is to find out about the applicant: To do this start by putting
the person at ease. Greet the candidates and start the interview by asking a non-controversial
question –perhaps about the weather or traffic condition that day. As a rule, all applicant, even
unsolicited drop-ins-should receive friendly courteous treatment, not only on humanitarian
grounds but also because your reputation is on the line. Be aware of the applicant’s status .For
example, if you are interviewing someone who is unemployed he or she may be exceptionally
nervous and you may want to take additional step to relax the person.
3. Ask Questions
Try to follow your structure interview guide or the question you wrote out ahead of time .A
menu of question to choose from. Avoid questions that can be answered ``yes’’ or ``no’’ , don’t
put word in the applicant’s mouth or telegraph the desire answer ,for instance , by nodding or
smiling when the right answer is given ,don’t interrogate the applicant as if the person is a
criminal and don’t be patronizing , sarcastic or inattentive , don’t monopolize the interview by
rambling nor lat the applicant’s opinions and feelings by repeating the person’s last comment as
a question .
When you ask for general statements of a candidate’s accomplishment, also ask for examples.
Thus if at the end candidate lists specific strengths or weakness, follow up with ``what are the
specific examples that demonstrate each of your strengths?’’
4. Close the interview
Toward the close of the interview, leave time to answer any questions the candidate may have
and if appropriate, to advocate your firm to the candidate. Try to end all inetrviews on a positive
note. The applicnat should be told whether there is an interest and if so, what the next step will
be. Similarly, rejections should be made diplomatically for instance, with a statement like,
''although your baackground is impressive, there are other candidates whose experience is closer
top our requirements.'' If the applicant is still being considered but a decision cant be reached at
once, say this. If oyur policy is to inform candidates of theri staus in writing, do so within a few
days of the interview.
5. Review the interview
After the candidates leaves, review your interview notes, fill in the structured interview guide
and review the interviewwhile it's fresh in your mind.
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Remember that snap judgments and negative emphasis are two common interviewing mistakes;
reviewing the interview shortly after the candidate has left can help you minimize these two
problems.
Review Questions
i) Explain reliability and validity. What is the difference between them?
ii) In what respect are they similar?
iii) Explain and illustrate the basic ways in which you can classify selection
interviews.
iv) Briefly describe each of the following possible types of interviews: unstructured
panel interviews; structured sequential interviews; job related structured
interviews
v) Briefly discuss and give examples of at least five common interviewing mistakes.
vi) What recommendations would you give for avoiding these mistakes?
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LESSON FIVE
Lesson objectives
Upon completing this lesson, the student should be able to:
a) Define the concepts of performance management and appraisal and recognize how
this can be applied in an organization.
b) Describe the steps in developing a performance management program and understand
its impact on the behavior of individuals in an organization.
c) Understand the process and skills involved in an effective performance appraisal
interview.
d) Identify and describe the major types of rating errors likely to be encountered in the
appraisal process.
5.0 Introduction
One of the most important activities of an HR is maintaing and enhancing the workforce.after all
the effort and cost involved in the recruiting and selection process, it is important to develop
employees so that they are using their fullest capabilities, thus improving the effectiveness of the
organiztion. Performance management is the ongoing process of evaluating and improving
employee performance. Therefore, it is important that the organization develop procedures and
policies, which comply with process.
The development of standard performance appraisal process will help companies to improve
their bottom-line perfomance, uplift motivational efforts, and resolve most moral problems.
The purpose of this lesson is to provide an understanding of this stagae of the sucess system
model: a description of the performance management and appraisal process. This includes the
major appraisal techniques, discussing various rating methods, and identifying several
performance evaluation problems. Perfomance management is key factor in enhancing the
development of the organiztion's employees.
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current job if the promotion involves different skills from the employee's current job, it is
often impossible to predict how the individual will perform at the new level.
4. Evaluation performance appraisal information may also be used to evaluate the
effectiveness of the recruitment process, to validate selection criteria or other predictors
of job perfomance. In these cases, the HR manger on-the- job perfomance appraisal so
that the test scores or selection ratings can be correlated to job performance
5. Internet feedback This is a feedback system where employees send feedback to assist
managers in assessing their leadreship skills. The system is user friendly and is seen by
employees as worthwhile. The system feedback not only assesses manager's team
leadership skills, but also helps them develop those skills. The advantagaes of the system
include the reduction of paperwork, reducing employee's times, and maintaining
employees anonymity while providing prompt feedback. The result is informative
feedback that promotes leadership development.
6. Development tool Performance apparaisal may also be used as a development tool for the
individual employee, providing an opprtunity for feedback, recognition, and reinforce
ment.
This performance reveiw also provides employees with career goals and direction for future
performance
The appraisal allows the organizationto select those best qualified for promotion suggest areas
where training may be effective, and help improve individual performance, resulting in improved
bottom-line productivity. From the individual's viewpoint, performance appraisals should
provide recogntion of one's contributions; a feeling of support from one's immediate supervisor
and the feeling of security from knowing one is performing satisfactory.
When giving feedback to an employee in an appraisal, the interview should have the necessary
information to make the evaluation of job perfomance and present a summation of that
information. At this point the feedback session should trun to a discussion of developing
strengths, thus shifting into a counsellling session. It is suggested that supervisors keep a file on
each worker, noting significance accomplishments or setbacks and appraisals as an ongoing
process.
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frequent observation of each other's work behavoir. Often peers (or customers )have
better knowledge have bettr knowledge of certain aspects of the employee's work
performance.
This metjhod often places greater emphasis on team performance and team rewards
5. Surbodinate rating Yet another form is the reverse procedure of surbodinate evaluating
superiors. This may be placing an unfair burden upon the surbodinates who, on top of
being expected to perform their jobs satisfactoryily, now are placed undere the additional
stress of evaluating the person who will soon be evaluating them. Also, this assumes the
surbodinates criteria is similar to the goals and objectives of the oragnization. Many
organizations use self, surbodinate, peer and supervisor ratings as a comprehensive
appraisal. Although these sources of evaluation are innovative and thought provoking,
they are not generally accepted in most oraganizations
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The graphic rating scale is the same as the graphic rating scale, with the exception
that the performance variables receive different weights depending upon their
importance in performing the job.The rating procedures is the same except that each
variable has a box in which the rate indicates with a 1,2,3 and so on, the relevant
importance of that variable.scoring is achieved by multiplying these numbers times
the value of the performance levels ranging from exceptional to below normal. How
ever , the weighted graphic rating scale, although emphasizing the more important
performance variables,suffers the same problems as the graphic rating scale.Rater
subjectively is still present, as is the tendencz to overrate present behaviour and
group people within a narrow range.
ii. Behavioral anchored rating scale BARS
A more sophisticated form of rating is the Behavioral Anchored Rating Scales,
commonly referred to as BARS.BARS are graphic scales with the performance
variables anchored in description of actual job bahavior. For instance, BARS for a
wage and salary administrator might range from“ maintains a current database „ to
„fails to coordinate with appropriate committees.“BARS are constructed for each
individual job category, and not for individual positons within these categories. The
results are BARS that are broadly descriptive to cover the positions within job
categories. The reasons for this are that constructing BARS is very timeconsuming
,very costly and very often needs to be updated .it is often not practical to do this first
for each individual position .BARS appear to provide a workable system. It also has
the advantage of using job categories which are closerly reviwed from performance
content. The anchors are job descriptiveand should promote rate accurancy.
iii. 360 Degree or Multirater
This process allows employees to receive constructive and accurate rating
feedback.The rating information is gathered from a questionnaire with approximetly
100 items to otain ratings.The questionnaire is usually completed by a work group of
around ten people. This work group includes the person being rated, ther boss,
several peers, and subordinates.
iv. Ranking
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Setting Expectations. Employers must provide employees with clear instructions of what the
company expects of them.It would be unfair not to do this and then terminate employees.Not
only is it unfair, in adversaral proceedings (courts, arbitrators, or commissions one of the first
questions asked is“..... did the employees fail to meet in terms of conduct, performance, or
behaviour“ Employers who reply the employee should have known will usually receive the
reply“,You should have told them.“ Big trouble!
Notification of Not Making the Grade. An employee discharged is unfair if the employee has not
been told previously that ones job is on the line.This notifies employees they are not making the
grades so they can make the suggested changes to preserve their job.
When employees know their records reflect their shortcomings, thez are less likelz to sue, which
would place their personal records into the public record.
Nonpunitive discipline. Many supervisors are reluctant to punish their children, let alone adulit
employees. Most will not use discipline,even if the employer requires it. Nonpunitive discipline
can be used and many believe it generates more effective results . Employers have the right to
be treated like adults and shouldand should be counseled on their job shortcomings in a direct
and nonpunitive manner.
Deficiences, Not causes. When employers try to address the real cause of a workplace problem
such as emotional , medical ,or personal, there is a real risk of lawsuits.The reason is when you
do so you are actually considering the employee as having a disabling condition which is agaisnt
the law. Focus only on what takes place at the workplace. Do not inquire nor spectaculates as to
what may be the“ real“
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Avoid Intent. When employees do not meet the company expectations, it does not mean they
are bad and do not care. Stay out of the trap of analyzing the employees thoughts. you cannot
prove an employee doenst care, but you can prove missed deadlines and defective work. If you
focus on subjective intent, you allow the employee to divert attention away from the real issue
of objectives deficient work behaviour.
Avoid Delay.If one must discipline employees ,do not delay. The longer time elapses, the more
rigid our view of the employee becomes. Employees should have a chance to improve, not be
judged prematurely. By acting quickly, you reduce the possibility the employee will raise
protected complaint such as harassment or disability.
Other aspects of implementing performance management , which requires attention, is providing
employees the opportunity to defend themselves. There are usually two side to every work
incident.Employees should have a reasonable opportunity to improve. Any discipline should be
progressive with reasonable time between each stop.The business should make good use of the
introductry periods of 30 to 90 days at the beginning of employment to document employees
work problems. If the new employees will not work out, now is the time for discharge.It is only
fair to the particular employees so they can invest their time and effort in a more suitable job.All
disharges should be the some for similar situtions. Double standards and favoritism will cause
legal problems later as comparisons are made. Always provide an appeals procedure such as per
review because although companies try to be fair , errors will occur.
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In a feedback session using employee self ratings of their performance,there may be problems
with the surpervisors rating differing. Such issues go beyond just the differences in overall
ratings and require additional discussion. On cause of appraisal maz be the lack of top
management support. The result is that both the rater realize little will result from the evalution
process so they merely go through the motions,often wasting valuable time and energy. It is only
when management supports appraisal and makes it known to the later that their future with the
company depends upon their effectiveness in evaluating ratees, will there be appropriate results.
This also applies to the ratees because they must be convinced their evaluations will eventually
decide future career opportunities, pay raises, and possible promotions.
When the company is unionized, the major cause of evaluation problems is sing seniority as the
basis for pay increases, promotions, and other work related issues such as vacations, shift
preferences, and overtime.Although this is a contractual procedure, subject to negotiations, the
company often does have other choices.
For instance, the company wuold prefer to keep the seniority unit as small as possible, permitting
the seniority restriction to apply to the smallest number of people and thus allowing greater
company discretion in appraisal. Of course, the union desires larger seniority units, because it
hopes to maximize the number of people to who the seniority rule applies.For example, in a
layoff situation, the seniority person would bump the least senior person.When units are small
the effects of seniority are often minimized. Other approaches to the seniority issues would split
merit and senoirity system, with extra, performance points given for years of service. Also,when
merit measures favor a nonseniority person over a seniority person, a joint management union
commitee could resolve the issue.The seniority issue aside performance management appraisal
plans will continue to be major factor in determining pay increase, promotions, and rentention in
business organizations.
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The format for the appraisal interview will be determined in large part by the purpose of the
interview, th type of appraisal system used, and the organization of the interview form. Most
appraisal interviews attempt to give feed back to employees on how well they are performing
theri jobs, and to make plns for their future development. Interviews should be scheduled far
enough in advance to allow the interviewee, as well as the interviwer, to prepare for the
discussion.
Areas of emphasis
A major purpose of the appraisal interview is to make plans for improvement; however, itis
important to focus the interview's attention on the future rather than the past. The interviewer
should observe the following points:
i) Emphasize strengths on which the employee can build rather thna weaknesses to
overcome
ii) Avoid suggestions about the personal traits to change; instead suggest more
acceptable ways of performing.
iii) Concentrate on opportunities for growth that exist within the framework of the
employee's present position.
iv) Limit plans for growth to a few important items that can be accoplished within a
reasonable period of time.
Although fairness issue is a major concern in all the working areas of HRM, it is very important
in the appraisal interview. The principles of justice for the basis for HRM practices in hiring,
performance appraisal and rewards. Thereis ample evidence that fairness increases the company's
employee loyalty. The result is satisfied, committed employees who are willing to demonstrate
extra job effort. This leads to positive employee job behaviors even if they are relate only to job
description, performance appraisals, or reward programs.
The appraisal interview is perphaps themot important part of the entire performance appraisal
process. Unfortunately, the interviewer can become overburden by attempting to discuss too
much as the employee's past performance and future development goals. Dividing the appraisal
interview into sessions, one of for the time pressures. Moreover, by separating the interview into
two sessions, the interviewer can give each session alos may imporve communication between
tha parties, thereby reducing stress. A good , supporting feedback interview can result in graeter
employee satisfaction with the appraisal interview.
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Another source of ineffective performance is the normally happy employer who suddenly
demonstrates negative behavoir. Over a period of several weeks their behavior becomes
aggressive and threatening. It could be cause be by medical condition, such as depression, or
because the employee has stopped taking prescribed medication. Whatever is causing the
behavior cchange must be unique to that person, although some people are mnaturally
antagonistic or withdrawn. An important consideration is the disturbed employee may cause
valuable employees to transfer or leave the company.
Ineffective behavior maybe caused by the work environmant. The competitive worl oof work
with its budget cuts, restructuring and high tech advance are extending the reach of the
workplace, overloading many employees. Employees begin to burn out when the negative
pressure, conflicts and demands increasingly outweigh the positive of personnal
acknowlegdement, and sucesses. Exhausted workers report lower job satsfaction, lower
commitment and higher job turnover.
Bcause highly motivated and commited employes are apt to burn out the company is losing its
best people. Companies must incraese their acknowledgement and show appreciation to
employees doing a good job. these rewards should be distributed fairly to employees because an
unfair alocation increases negativism.
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to standards, the cause could be skill problem (knowledge, abilities technical competencies,) an
effort problem(motivation to get the job), or some problems in the external conditions of work
(poor woking conditions, supluyshortages, difficult sales territories). If any one of thesse there
elements re unfavouravble, performance will usually suffer
Optimal perfomance
The performance management process is designed t assits employees to developtheir full
potentail ; that is to obtain their sucessful performance in the work environment. With the
flattening of the company structure and the emphasis on quick response, more work is being
done in task force and project teams. Employees are placed in teams with memberes of varying
skills and must move quickly to complete their assignments before moving on to a new team and
new project. The management consult beelieves tihs recruiting redeployment of employees is not
being accomplished in an efficent manner. They may be misassigned or mismatched.the situation
may also be inappropriate for the employee to achive optimal performance
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What is optimal performance? This occurs when employees produce outstanding or optimal
results for this take place, the employee must be selected to perform in a particular work
environment requiring that persons unique talents, which lead to their high performance pattern.
Outstanding personall sucess is not random, accidental, or lucky. An employee does certain
things when sucessful which are different when not sucessful; the person is in their high
performance pattern. Each person has high performance pattern which is unique to the person.
No two people have the smae high performance pattern for succesful performances to achiev
perfromance, there must be a cerful people match between the job assignments and adjustments
in how work is assnged to capitalize on the unique sucess patterns of the team mebers. Some
companies have treid this approach and were highly sucessful. From the perspective of
performance management, very performance review would become an original appraisal. This
would appear to require a rethinking of performance management process
Review Questions
i) Contrast and compare the difference between performance appraisal technique .
ii) Which technique would you prefer for an educational institution e.g school.
iii) How would you define ‘’performance management’’.
iv) Present and discuss examples of how performance appraisal techniques are
used in educational settings.
v) Do you feel school administrators should receive training in concluding
performances evaluations? Why or why not?
vi) Discuss and explain the basic problems that can arise in performance appraisal
vii) How frequently should performance appraisal take place?
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LESSON SIX
Lesson Objectives
At the end of this lesson, the student should be able to:
a) Define the concept and major purpose of training in an organization.
b) Describe the steps in developing and implementing an effective orientation and
training program.
c) Understand the uses of a systems approach to training in an organization.
d) Identify and describe the major types of training methods and techniques.
6.0Introduction
After the employee has been recruited, selected and inducted, he or she must next be developed
to better fit the job and the organization. No one is perfect fit at the time of hiring, and some
training and education must take place. No organization has a choice of whether to develop
employees or not; the only choice is that of method. If no organized program exists, then
development will largely be self- development while learning on the job.
Development would include both the training to increase skill in performing a specific job and
education to increase general knowledge and understanding of our total environment.
In the future, the only winning companies will be those that quickly to changing conditions,
increasing workforce diversity, and the critical issue of training- related problems. Preparing
employees to function in high performing system is an important HR activity and is the focus of
this lesson. The modern HR manager must not only be flexible and adaptive in changing
environment but must also be able to develop a system approach to training. Rapidly changing
technology necessitates employees who have the skills, abilities and knowledge to keep up with
new complex production and techniques.
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Training is a process that begins with the orientation of the new employee and continues
throughout an employees’ career. Therefore, it is important that the HR manager develop labor
force.
Training is critical because it provides the skills needed both now and in the future. The
underlying assumption is; if an individual employee becomes more productive and more
involved, the total organization will also be improved. An overlooked benefit of training is when
it is a continuing process rather than occasional. It has been found that when companies train
their employees continually, not as a high level of performance, but it also helps to eliminate a
negative work place.
6.1 Training
Training may be defined as an attempt to improve performance by the attainment of specific
skills such as typing, welding, running a computer and so forth, to do the current job the goal of
training is to ensure that a number of job skills will be performed at prescribed quality levels by
trained employees.
6.1.2 Development
Development is more general than training and refers to learning opportunities designed to help
employees grow this provides employees with less detailed information but provides broader
learning, which may be utilized in a variety of settings and for future jobs. Some examples would
include learning computer programming so one could write programs, understanding human
behavior as it relates to motivation, understanding total quality development is to broaden the
employees’ comprehension of generalized situations that may overlap into specific events. In
essence, development is macro, not micro. It results in comprehension of processes and through
this in understanding results in better job performance.
6.1.3 Combination programs
Training programs may combine both training and development. In fact, development is
becoming merely a factor in training programs as the business world begins to experience the
serious deterioration of the education system in grades K through 12. As global competition
increases, training programs for management are becoming more educational in scope with
instruction in such fields as ethnic and cultural development in the world marketplace.
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An example of development is the problem of technical versus managerial expertise allowing for
promotion of both and not creating dead-end jobs. One answer is to develop dual careers paths
allowing both groups promotional and development opportunities. Many industries have used
this procedure and is now quiet common in information technology (IT) departments. By
creating two career development paths- one by the traditional route of assuming management
responsibilities and other by moving up a technical route of assuming management
responsibilities and other by moving up a technical ladder- this helps to cut turnover while
building more efficient IT groups.
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ensures that training programs are focusing on important topics and goals that have meaning to
trainees.
Achieving the objectives and criteria can be accompanied through the selection of an appropriate
training approach. The basic techniques include coaching, internship, on-the-job training,
apprenticeship, job rotation, job instruction method, mentoring, case method, continuing
education, college and correspondences courses, lecturers, role playing, simulation programmed
instruction and vestibule training. These training methods can be used to achieve either one or a
combination of learning objectives: cognitive, non-cognitive, and psychomotor. Cognitive
learning relates to job specifics. It is concerned with facts and method sequences. Non-cognitive
is concerned with behaviours : creating and responding to position requirement. Psychomotor
involves performing tasks requiring use of hands, feet and body.
(c) Internships
Interns usually follow a formalized training program. An internship program usually consists of a
series of job assignments over specific time periods designed to prepare person for better job
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responsibilities. To ensure interns make the necessary progress in their job assignments, daily log
of their activities is kept and/or written reports are reviewed by appropriate supervisors. These
jobs are usually channeled through the internship coordinator who oversees the progress and
functions as the administrators of the internship program.
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In the changing technological environment of the 200s, apprenticeship programs also face new
challenges. A trainee may spend several years learning a specific job skill, and then find upon
completion of the apprenticeship that these job skills are no longer needed.
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through a series of self-paced steps. Each step consists of factual material to be mastered, which
is directly followed by a question. The trainees’ responses are immediately verified after each
question. If the replies are correct the trainees proceed to the next item. If the responses are
incorrect, the question is repeated. Computer aided instruction offers the advantage of
individualized training. Trainees progress at their own pace, receive immediate feedback, and are
active, as opposed to passive learners. The potential of computer-aided instruction is limited only
by the amount of training needs, and is becoming one of the most popular training methods.
(i) Mentoring
Mentoring establishes a formal relationship between junior and senior colleagues or between a
person with superior knowledge and a less experienced employee. It is similar to a parent-child
relationship in that one provides guidance and tutorship in the ways of career success, including
sponsorship, coaching, and protection of the colleague, exposure to important contacts and
assignments of challenging work.
A mentor can be an important aid in the development of the junior person, and may also be
valuable for improving the job involvement and satisfaction of the mentor. The mentor begins by
determining the employee’s job and the direction of the subsequent career path. Together, the
mentor and the employee should develop career goals based on abilities and company
promotional opportunities. One approach is both parties to maintain a diary of events both
feedback and agreement of the progress attained.
An evaluation format should be established at the start of the mentoring program. This can be as
simple as both parties discussing progress or evaluation by other managers of the employee, or
more formal committee reviews at various points in the program.
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The answer to the first area of concern – whether the designated needs were met and the specific
criteria satisfied – involves both the trainee and the trainee’s supervisor. Some type of test will
often measure the trainee’s accumulating of knowledge. However, the key area is whether the
training received by the employee translates back of the job to increase effectiveness. This
knowledge is possessed by the supervisor who should be surveyed through some form of written
appraisal after the trainee has trainee has returned to the job for an appropriate time period.
Whether the selected teaching method was effective will be the result of summating the trainee’s
test scores and the supervisors rating of whether the employee is now more effective on the job.
The final area of concern is the effectiveness of the instructor. The same evaluation data used in
the previous appraisals can be used here also, although the analysis will be somewhat different.
The student test scores and the supervisor’s evaluating need to be reviewed for possible areas of
course weakness and curriculum deficiencies. After determining these effects, these effects, the
instructor can determine the appropriate changes at the teaching level to increase effectiveness.
In conclusion, for an organization or a company to maintain success, it must employ a systematic
approach to training and developing employees. The purpose of training includes:
1. Orienting new employees
2. Improving productivity
3. Developing employee skill levels
4. Enhancing job competency
5. Solving organizational problems.
6. Developing promotable employee from within the organization
In any organization, commitment to training must start at the top, customer service is the key to
success, and all employees are trained to focus on customer satisfaction. The true key to
successful change is employee involvement and commitment. Other employee training resources
include interactive web-based training and the virtual university.
SUMMARY
In the past decade, training has become increasingly popular as an HR technique for improving
employee and managerial performance in organizations. It has been suggested that most
organizations provide some type of formal training and spend millions of money in the effort. An
effective training program depends upon systematic approach including a careful need
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assessment, program design and evaluation of results. In this lesson, we examined the major
organization training and orientation programs. Training and development includes the
orientation of new employees as their job requirements change. Encouraging the development
and growth of employees and managers is another aspect.
You will have the opportunity to assess a training problem and to develop a set of strategies and
techniques for an organization training program. Clearly, a new employee’s initial experience on
the job can have a major affect on a later career, just as a student entering a new class. In
evaluating learning in class, we measure changes in learning skills, behaviour and results. The
impact on the performance of the organization provides the bottom line.
Review Questions
i) Define the terms training, development, and orientation, internship, off the
job training and on the job training.
ii) What are the major goals of orientation training?
iii) How important is motivation in orientation training?
iv) On your first day on the job, what orientation did you receive?
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LESSON SEVEN
Lesson Objectives
At the end of the lesson the student should be able to:
a) Discuss the issue of equal pay with regard to gender in the work place
b) Define what a two tier pay is.
c) Explain what is meant by the term fair and square with regard to gender.
d) Explain why organizations use variable pay when compensating their employees.
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different techniques to keep salaries fair and square, equitable compensations have several
common features such as salaries based primarily on the industry market pay rates, not on some
employee’s value to the firm based on an arbitrary evaluation system.
Another common feature is system in which skills, performance, and tenure are objectively
evaluated and measured. This allows HRM to monitor the process and control adherence to the
approved procedures. The results should be accepted as not deviating from the process. The last
common feature of a gender-neutral compensation system is a regular review for any
irregularities caused by cutbacks, transfers, mergers, or sudden increases in recruiting. When
irregularities are uncovered, they are immediately corrected.
The corners of all companies fair and square compensation system requires continuous
adjustments. The gender system goal is to be able to highlight any unfair treatment for all
employees, even between two white male employees.
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goals for manufacturing have the final approval employees were told the implementation would
be immediate.
Never underestimate the ability of employee to understand. They are at least as sharp as the
managers who created the original compensation program. When the subject is pay-related, they
listen carefully and are away of inequities, which will then share with other employees.
Avoid compensation legal terms and unnecessary details. All employee communications
containing excessive financial and legal terms are very ineffective. A more effective method is
quarterly posters to update employees on the two main goals of variable pay; operating margins
and customer satisfaction. An effective poster tells what is needed and is understood in seconds.
Management must acknowledge present deficiencies in the current compensation plan. The
current deficiencies are the reason for implementing variable plan. The real success is whether
margins and customer satisfaction improves as a result of employee recommending improvement
strategies.
The variable pay program is whether the employees perceive it a being fair and equitable. The
employees must buy-it that the variable pay plan is in their and the company’s best interest.
Review Questions
i) Present examples of comparable worth in an organization you have worked
for.
ii) Define what a two tier pay is.
iii) Explain what is meant by the term fair and square with regard to gender.
iv) Explain why organizations use variable pay when compensating their
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LESSON EIGHT
Lesson Objectives
At the end of this lesson, the student should be able to:
a) Define and discuss the concept of employee incentive programs
b) Describe the growth and objective of major employee incentive systems.
c) Understand the relationship of employee stock ownership plans (ESOP) to goals of
employee satisfaction and productivity.
d) Identity and describe the major types of incentive programs.
e) Define and discuss the external and internal factors, which lead to flexible incentive
8.0 Introduction
As global competition causes our businesses to restructure, the empowerment of employees to
work faster and smarter has become increasingly important. However, the success of employee
empowerment depends upon our ability to motivate this extra effort. Motivation may be defined
in terms of some performance behaviour. Motivation is an emotive state causing persons to want
or need something intensely enough to put forth the necessary effort to achieve it. This drive to
achieve is usually goal-directed, and becomes more complex when dealing with groups or teams.
What drives us as individuals to achieve is often difficult to decipher, as our needs and desires
will vary over time.
8.1 Motivation
Motivation is a process in which people chose between alternative forms of behaviour in order to
achieve personal goals.
The goals sought by individuals can be relatively tangible, such as monetary reward or
promotion, or intangible such as self-esteem or job satisfaction.
The rewards available to an individual are generally classified under
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(a) Intrinsic rewards – those that derive from the individuals own experience e.g. sense of
achievement or a feeling of self-esteem.
(b) Extrinsic rewards – those conferred on a person from outside e.g. a pay rise or promotion.
Managers find reliable links between individual motivation and effective performance.
There are many theories of motivation. The human relations school believes employees want to
do a good job. Although their individual may differ, they would be motivated to achieve their
potential.
Hygiene factors include working conditions, pay, company policies, and interpersonal relations.
When hygiene factors are only factors present in the job, they do not motive employees, they
only satisfy them. However, if they are not present, the work then becomes dissatisfying. To
motivation, the employee needs the presence of the hygiene factors plus the motivators. The
motivators are higher-level employee needs of achievement, recognition, responsibility and
opportunity.
However individuals act to obtain these goals, they must believe their behaviour will lead to their
attainment. A crucial element is how valuable the goal is to the individual. The more value the
individual attaches to the goal, the more effort the individual will expend to achieve the goal.
The three basic needs are achievement, affiliation, and power. The need for power is defined as
controlling others, assuming responsibility for others and having authority over other.
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management may have to give sufficient attention to the design and implementation of incentive
programs.
The success of pay for performance system mainly depends on the organization. If the
organization has a strong corporate culture, high morale, and employees trust the management,
then there is a stronger probability of success.
Team incentives should not be used in situations where a few individuals are likely to maximize
their output at the expenses of their coworkers. Group incentives should reduce rivalry and
promote cooperation and concern for all members in the units overall performance.
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2. Piecework
One of the oldest most commonly used incentives plans is piecework. In a straight piecework
plan, the employee receives a certain amount of pay for each unit produced. Compensation is
then determined by the number of units produced during a specific time period. Employees often
earn as much as 55 per cent more than their base pay in a piecework system. The differential
piece plan enables employees whose production exceeds the standard output to receive a higher
rate of all of their work than the rate rapid to those who perform below the standard.
The piecework systems are more like succeed in repetitive jobs where units of output can be
reliably measured, when quality is less critical, and with a continuous flow of work.
Unfortunately, it is not effective in jobs that do not have reliable standards of performance. One
of the weaknesses of piecework is that it may not always be an effective motivator. If workers
find that increases in output bring disapproval their fellow workers, then the need for friendship
and approval may outweigh the incentive to produce more. Secondly, the standards for piece
rates often tend to change, because employees discover ways to do the work in less than standard
time.
3. Individual Bonuses
Individual bonuses are an incentive payment that supplements the basic wage. It has the
advantage of reward workers with more pay for higher performance effort, yet still providing a
basic paycheck.
4. Team Bonuses
Team bonuses are usually used when the contribution of an individual employee is either not
measurable or when performance depends on team cooperation. Which work process requiring
more teamwork and coordination among workers, team bonuses are very popular. Most team
bonus plans are tied to such measurable outputs as company profit, improvements in quality, or
cost reductions. Team bonuses, like individual incentives plans, often improve employee
motivation. This allows the organization to:
a. Reward team productivity.
b. Compensate team members for new skills.
c. Increase overall performance
Incentives for Management Employees
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Merit raises represent one of the most commonly used incentives systems for managerial level
employees. They are used to motivate managerial, sales and professional employees where raises
can be directly related to performance. Merit increases are usually separate from the person’s
base pay.
5. Sales Incentives
Sales incentive plans are often based on the same factors as individual incentive programs. The
drive needed in selling demand highly motivated sales personnel. The competitive nature of
selling underlines the widespread use of sales incentives.
Sales incentive plans often share many of the characteristics of individual incentives, but there
are also unique requirements. Sales output measures can usually be establishes as the level of
sales (in shillings or units), but sales people are not paid just on sales volume. They often
provided other services, such as customer training, product development, consultation and new
accounts, which involve complex measures of performance. A critical first step for a sales
incentive program then is to determine the most important performance factors. In general, sales
performance maybe measured by the total sales volume and by their ability to generate new
accounts. If measures are used such as promoting new products and providing customer service,
then more complex measures may be used.
Setting performance standards for sales are not without problems because sales performance is
often affected by external factors beyond the control of the salesperson. There are economic and
seasonal fluctuation, differing levels of competition, changes in demand, and more lucrative
sales territories which can all affect an individual’s sales level. Because sales volume along not
be an accurate an indicator of the effort salespeople have expanded many organizations set
quotas based on sales potential. In designing an incentive plan for sales people, there are also the
problems of rewarding extra sales effort and compensating for promotional activities that may
not impact directly on sales.
6. Managerial and Executive Incentives
There is research to support the use of incentive systems for executives, which are usually related
to the strategic goals of the organization. Incentives for managerial and executives are believed
to have an impact upon organizational performance although there is little data to support this
belief. In most cases executive incentive plans are linked to net income, return on investment,
stock price, or total dividend paid. These incentives are usually paid in the form of bonuses and
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stock options. CEO’s often receive over half of their compensation from incentives resulting in
criticism of what they actually contribute to the corporation.
Pros and Cons of Executive Bonuses
Are top executives really worth the exorbitant salaries and bonuses they receive? The answer
usually depends on whom you ask. Corporate compensation committees feel that big bonuses are
necessary as a way to reward superior performance as a ‘fact of business life’ reflecting market
trends for CEO compensation.
However, as previously noted, strong criticism is being voiced regarding the high salaries and
bonuses being paid to senior executives. Others point out that some critics often find executive
may receive record bonuses even though their organizations are performing poorly and
employees are being asked to take wage and salary cuts or layoffs.
7. Executive Perquisites
In order to recruit and attract top people executives usually receive special benefits termed
perquisites. Perquisites or perks are recognized by executives as important in the organization,
the extras used to supplement basic compensation. Perks also serve as status symbol to both
insides and outsiders. Perquisites also provide tax savings to executives, because most perks are
not taxable as income (although this is constantly changing). The more common perks range
from company care special parking expenses accounts, plush offices chauffeurs, country club
memberships, special vacations, physical exams an executive dining room, and liability
insurance. Perks are an entrenched feature of executive compensation.
8. Team profit Sharing Plans
There has been an increase in the number and type of team or group incentive plans. Team
incentive plans are becoming preferable to individual incentives as a result of the increasing use
of team-based approaches. An effective team incentive plan is based on the same factors an
individual plan is based on the same factors as individual plans.
The measures differ in that a team plan is based on some measure of team productivity. Team
plans are particularly effective when team work is essential and when the essential system is
trying to involve the level of participation. Team plans are used when jobs are so interested that
it is difficult (or impossible) to identify individual output measures. The size of a team usually
ranges from 5 to 20 people, depending upon the task and the required coordination between team
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members. The smaller the team, ‘the higher the identification on team performance’. There is
increasingly evidence that team incentives increase productivity.
9. Gain sharing Plans
Gain sharing plans try to reduce the amount of labour required for a given level of output (cost
saving) or increase the output for a given amount of labour (productivity increase). The method
for determining the standard production rate and the incentives rate must be clearly defined. Gain
sharing plans are based on the assumption that better cooperation among workers and between
workers and manages will result in greater effectiveness.
Review Questions
i) Define and the concept of employee incentive programs
ii) Explain why performance plans are important in an organization.
iii) Identity and describe the major types of incentive programs.
iv) Define and discuss the external and internal factors, which lead to flexible
incentive programs.
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LESSON NINE
LABOUR RELATIONS
Lesson Objectives:
At the end of this lesson, the student should be able to:
a) Define the concepts of employee relations and industrial relations.
b) Describe the role of the human resource function in employee relations.
c) Explain collective bargaining and the forms of collective bargaining.
9.0 Introduction
The purpose of this lesson is to provide a review of labour relations (employee relations. It deals
with a summary of the elements of employee relations and the developments in industrial
relations. It concludes with the various types of third party dispute resolution in industrial
relations.
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The philosophies and policies of the major players in the industrial relations scene; the
government of the day, management and the trade unions.
A number of parties each with different roles. These consist of the state, management,
employer’s organizations, the trade unions, individual managers and supervisors, HR
managers, employee representatives or shop stewards and employees.
The legal framework
A number of institutions such as the Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service
(ACAS) and the employment tribunals.
The bargaining structures, recognition and procedural agreements and practice which
have enrolled to enable the formal system to operate.
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Systems theory, however, does not sufficiently take into account the distribution of power
between management and trade unions, nor the impact of the state. Neither does id adequately
explain the role of the individual in industrial relations.
9.2.1 Types of Regulations and Rules
Job regulation aims to provide a framework of minimum rights and rules. Internal regulation is
concerned with procedures for dealing with grievances, redundancies of disciplinary problems
and rules concerning the operation of the pay system and the rights of shop stewards. External
regulation is carried out by means of employment legislation, the rules of trade unions and
employer’s associations, and the regulative content of procedural or substantial rules and
agreements.
Procedural rules are intended to regulate conflict between the parties to collective bargaining,
and when their importance is emphasized, a premium is being placed on industrial peace.
Substantial rules settle the rights and obligations attached to jobs. It is interesting to note that in
the U.K., the parties to collective agreements have tended to concentrate more on procedural
than on substantive rules. In the USA, where there is greater emphasis on fixed-term agreements,
the tendency has been to rely on substantive rules.
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the inequalities of individual bargaining power between employers and employees in the labour
market.
Collective bargaining can also be seen as a political relationship in which trade unions, as
Chamberlain and Kuhn (1965) noted, share industrial sovereignty or power over those who are
governed, the employees. The sovereignty is held jointly by management and union in the
collective bargaining process.
Above all, collective bargaining is a power relationship that takes the form of measure of power
sharing between management and trade unions (although recently the balance of power has
shifted markedly in the direction of management).
9.3.1 Bargaining power
The extent to which industrial sovereignty is shared by management with its trade unions (if at
all) depends upon the relative bargaining powers of the two parties. Bargaining power can be
defined as the ability to induce the other side to make a decision that it would otherwise not
make. As Fox and Flanders (1969) commented: ‘Power is the crucial variable which determines
the outcome of collective bargaining’. It has been suggested by Hawkins (1979) that a crucial
test of bargaining power is ‘whether the cost to one side is accepting a proposal from the other is
higher than the cost not accepting it. Singh (1989) has pointed out that bargaining power is not
static but varies over time. He also notes that:
Bargaining power is inherent in any situation where differences have to be reconciled. It
is, however, not an end in itself and negotiations must not rely solely on bargaining
power. One side may have enormous bargaining power, but to use it to the point where
the other side feels that it is impossible to deal with such a party is to defeat the purpose
of negations.
Atkinson (1989) asserts that:
What creates bargaining power can be appraised in terms of subjective assessments by
individuals involved in the bargaining process.
Each side can guess the bargaining preferences and bargaining power of the other side;
There are normally a number of elements creating bargaining power.
9.3.2 Forms of collective bargaining
Collective bargaining takes two basic forms, as identified by Chamberlaid and Kuhn (1965).
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Conjunctive bargaining, which ‘arises from the absolute requirement that some agreement
– any agreement – may be, reached so that the operations on which both are dependent
many continue’, and results in a ‘working relationship in which each party agrees,
explicitly or implicitly, to provide certain requisite services, to recognize certain
responsibilities in respect of each other’.
Cooperative bargaining, in which it is recognized that each party is dependent on the other
and can achieve it objectives more effectively if it wins the support of the other.
A similar distinction was made by Walton and McKersie (1965), who referred to distributive
bargaining as the ‘complex system of activities instrumental to the attainment of ones party’s
goals when they are in basic conflict with those of the other party’ and to integrate bargaining as
the ‘system of activities which are not in fundamental conflict with those of the other party and
which therefore can be integrated to some degree’. Such objectives are said to define ‘an area of
common concern, a purpose’.
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negotiations while local officials may not be involved in plant negotiations unless there is a
‘failure to agree’ and the second stage of a negotiation procedure is invoked. Major employers
who want to introduce significant changes in agreements or working arrangements may deal
direct with national officials.
The trade union movement is now dominated by the large general unions and the merged craft
and public service unions.
Shop Stewards
Shop stewards or employee representative may initial be responsible for plant negotiations,
probably with the advice of full-time officials. They will certainly be involved in settling
disputes and resolving collective grievances and in representing individual employees with
grievances or disciplinary matters. They may be members of joint consultative committees,
which could be wholly or partly composed of trade union representatives.
At one time, shop stewards were the ogres of the industrial relations scene. Undoubtedly there
were cases of militant shop stewards, but where there are recognized trade unions, managements
have generally recognized the value of shop stewards as points of contact and channels of
communication.
International Union Organizations
The two main international union organizations are the European Trade Union Confederation
and the International Trade Union Confederation. At present neither of these makes much impact
on the UK, but this could change.
Staff Associations
Staff association may sometimes have negotiating and /or representational rights but they seldom
have anything like the real power possessed by a well organized and supported trade union. They
are often suspected by employees as being no more than management’s poodle. Managements
have sometimes encouraged the development of staff association as an alternative to trade unions
but this strategy has not always worked. If fact, in some organizations the existence of an
unsatisfactory staff association has provided an opportunity for a trade union to gain membership
and recognition. Staff association have their uses as channels of communication, and
representatives can play a role in consultative processes and in representing colleagues who want
to take up grievances or who are being subjected to disciplinary proceedings.
The Role of Management
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The balance of power has undoubtedly shifted to management who now have more choice over
how they conduct relationships with their employees. But the evidence is that there has been no
concerted drive by managements to de-recognize unions. As Kessler and Bayliss (1992) point
out: If managers in large establishments and companies wanted to make changes they looked at
ways of doing so within the existing arrangements and if they could produce the goods they used
them. Because managers found that the unions did not stand in their way they saw no reason for
getting rid of them. ‘They argued that management’s industrial relations objectives are now
generally to:
Control the work progress
Secure cost-effectiveness
Reassert managerial authority
Move towards a more unitary and individualistic approach
As Storey (1992) found in most of the cases he studied, there was a tendency for
managements to adopt HRM approaches to employee relations while still coexisting with
the unions. But they gave increasing weight to systems of employee involvement in
particular communication, which bypass trade unions.
Employers Organizations
Traditionally, employer’s organizations have bargained collectively for their members with trade
unions and have in general aimed to protect the interests of those members in their dealings with
unions. Multi-employers or industry-wide bargaining, it was believed, allowed companies to
compete in product markets without undercutting their competitors’ employment costs and
prevented the trade unions ‘picking off’ individual employers in a dispute.
The trend towards decentralizing bargaining to plant level has reduced the extent to which
employers’ organizations fulfill this traditional role, although some industries such as building
and electrical contracting with large numbers of small companies in competitive markets have
retained their central bargaining function, setting a floor of terms and conditions for the industry.
Institutions, Agencies and Officers
There are a number of bodies and people with a role in employee relations, as described below
The Advisory Conciliation and Arbitration Service (ACAS)
ACAS was created by the government but function independently. It has three main statutory
duties:
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To resolve disputes
To provide conciliatory services for individuals in, for example, unfair dismissal cases
To give advice, help and information on industrial relations and employment issues.
ACAS helps to resolve disputes in three ways: collective conciliation, arbitration and arbitration
services declined considerably. But the individual conciliation case load has been very heavy and
the ACAS advisory work has flourished. These are aimed at encouraging non adversarial
approaches to preventing and resolving problems at work by facilitating joint working groups of
employers, employees and their representatives.
The central arbitration committee (CAC)
The CAC is an independent arbitration body that deals with disputes. It arbitrates at the request
of one party but with the agreement of the other. It does not handle many arbitrations but it deals
more frequently with claims by trade unions for disclosure of information for collective
bargaining purposes.
Employment Tribunals
Employment tribunals are independent judicial bodies that deal with disputes on employment
matters such as unfair dismissal, equal pay, sex and race discrimination and employment
protection provisions. They have a legally qualified chair and two other members, one an
employer, the other a trade unionist.
The Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT)
The EAT hears appeals from the decisions of industrial tribunals on questions of law only.
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Build stable and cooperative relationships with employees which recognizes that they are
stakeholders in the organization and minimize conflict
Achieve commitment through employee involvement and communications processes.
Develop mutuality – a common interest in achieving the organization’s goals through the
development of organizational cultures based on shared values between management and
employees.
Clarify industrial relations processes with trade unions and build harmonious
relationships with them on a partnership basis.
In these capacities HR practitioners can make a major contribution to the creation and
maintenance of a good employee relations climate.
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desirable to recognize only one union for collective bargaining and/or employee
representational purposes.
Collection bargaining – the extent to which it should be centralized or decentralized and
the scope of areas to be covered by collective bargaining.
Employee relations procedures – the nature and scope of procedures for redundancy,
grievance handling and discipline.
Participation and involvement – the extent to which the organization is prepared to give
employees a voice on matters that concern them.
Partnership – the extent to which a partnership approach is thought to be desirable.
The employment relationship – the extent to which terms and conditions of employment
should be governed by collective agreements or based on individual contracts of
employment (i.e. collectivism versus individualism).
Harmonization – terms and conditions of employment for staff and manual workers.
Working arrangements – the degree to which management has the prerogative to
determine working arrangements without reference to trade unions or employee (this
includes job-based or functional flexibility).
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The parties put the issue to an independent third party for determination. The parties agree in
advance to accept the arbitrator’s decision as a means of finally resolving the matter. There is
sometimes a reluctance to use this method as it removes control over the final outcome from
employers, employees or trade unions.
Mediation
Formal but non-binding recommendations or proposals are put forward for further consideration
by the parties. The use of dispute mediation is rare, partly because it is seen as a halfway house.
There is sometimes a feeling that if conciliation cannot succeed, it may be best simply to go all
the way to arbitration.
Review Questions
i) Define the term collective bargaining.
ii) Explain the 3 main third arty dispute resolution techniques
iii) Identify the various parties to industrial relations
iv) What is role of the human resource function in employee relations?
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LESSON TEN
Lesson Objectives
At the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
a) Explain the role of the government of Kenya with regard to human resource issues.
b) Outline the role of the Ministry of Labour in Kenya.
c) Identify the mandate of the Industrial Court of Kenya.
d) Discuss reasons why the government involves itself in human resource development.
10.0 Introduction
The government of Kenya has been involved in human resource issues in both the private sector
and the public sector. For instance, the development of the HRD Policy for Public Service of
Kenya was necessitated by the challenges that were faced in training and capacity building
processes in the Kenya Public Service since independence. Training was hitherto guided by
administrative circulars, human resource General letters and various guidelines issued to the
Service from time to time.
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Ministry of Labour
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The Industrial Court of Kenya has been one of the country's pillars for maintenance of industrial
peace. It was established under the Trade Dispute Act, Cap. 234, (Repealed) and Laws of Kenya
and implement the following mandate:
1. To hear and determine industrial disputes that are referred to it by the Minister for
Labour;
2. To register Collective Bargaining Agreements (CBAs) between employers and workers;
3. To promote the spirit of tripartism between Government, employers and employees.
Review Questions
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LESSON ELEVEN
JOB DESIGN
Lesson Objectives
At the end of this lesson, the student should be able to:
a) Define the term job design
b) Distinguish between job enlargement and job enrichment
c) Explain the various approaches to job design
d) Discuss the merits and demerits of information technology in human resource
management
11.0 Introduction
Jobs are fundamental to organizations. They are the principal vehicles for the allocation of tasks,
duties and roles to the various personnel employed by the organization. Most organizations are
faced by change in one form or another. Adapting the organization to respond adequately to
change, is a growing focus of attention in business and public services. Job design is therefore a
key element in responding to changing conditions.
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Davis concluded that in order to achieve more effective performance and greater job satisfaction
on the part of the employee, it was necessary for jobs to be meaningful to the individual
concerned.
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Review Questions
i) Describe the quality of working life in relation to tasks
ii) Distinguish between job enlargement and job enrichment
iii) Explain the various approaches to job design
iv) Discuss the effects of information technology on human resource management
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LESSON TWELVE
JOB EVALUATION
Lesson Objectives
At the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
a) Define the term, Job Evaluation
b) Describe the purpose of Job Evaluation
c) Explain the analytical methods of Job Evaluation
d) Explain the non-analytical methods of Job Evaluation
12.0 Introduction
Job evaluation is the name given to any activity which sets out to make systematic comparison
between jobs to asses their relative worth, for the purpose of establishing a rational pay structure.
In essence job evaluation aims to reduce reliance on arbitrary methods of pay determination by
introducing an element of objectivity in the ways jobs are compared. Every job evaluation
method requires at least some basic job analysis in order to provide factual information about the
jobs concerned. Nevertheless, as with many other aspects of personnel management, judgment
has to be exercised in the final analysis. As Kempner (1980) points out: “Job evaluation methods
depend to some extent on a series of subjective judgments made in the light of concepts like
logic, justice and equity and the progressive refinement of job evaluation techniques is an
attempt to minimize the subjective element.”
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3. The basic information on which jobs evaluation are made is obtained from job analysis.
4. Job evaluations are carried out by groups, not by individuals.
5. Job evaluation committees utilize concepts such as logic, fairness and consistency in
their assessment of jobs.
6. There is always some elements of subjective judgment in job evaluation.
7. Job evaluation does not determine pay scales, but merely provides the evidence on which
they may be devised.
The primary difference between these two categories is that the non-analytical methods take
whole jobs and rank them, whereas the analytical methods break jobs down into their component
parts and then compare them factor by factor. The implication is that analytical methods provide
a more refined means of measurement than non-analytical methods. This point is particularly
relevant for equal pay legislation, since only analytical schemes are considered to provide an
acceptable means of identifying “work of equal value”.
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disadvantage is that it relies heavily on the subjective assessments of the evaluators, and in
particular on their personal knowledge of the benchmark jobs.
In essence, the paired comparisons approach is an attempt to reduce the subjective element to a
limited extent by at least forcing judges to make comparisons in a systematic way. Nevertheless,
in the final analysis, such a system of evaluation relies considerably on personal judgment.
2. Job Grading
This form of evaluation, also known as job classification, attempts to distinguish between work
levels by establishing a small number of general criteria against which specific jobs may be
compared. The most well-known, and widely used, system of job grading is the scheme
developed by the Institute of Administrative Management. This scheme now has eight grades,
each with their statement of general criteria, into which almost 1000 typical office tasks can be
slotted. As fig 10.2 shows, grades A and B contain jobs at the elementary level of office work,
while Grade F, G and H contain work of high professional level. In a survey of job evaluation
methods conducted by Thakur & Gill (1976)², about one third clerical, administrative and
supervisory jobs were evaluated using some form of grading or classification.
Grade A – Tasks requiring no previous clerical experience; each individual task is either very
simple or closely supervised. Examples include: simple sorting and filling, and messenger
work.
Grade B – Simple tasks carried out in accordance with limited number of well-defined rules;
fairly short period of training; tasks closely directed and checked. Examples include: simple
copying work, and straightforward adding operations and using machine.
Grade C – Tasks of routine nature and following well-defined rules, but requiring some
experience or special aptitude. Examples include: simple calculating machine operations
preparing routine invoices, and shorthand –typing of routine work.
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Grade D – Tasks requiring considerable experience, but only a limited degree of initiative,
and which are carried out within existing procedure. Work is not subject to same amount of
direction as in lower grades. Examples include; shorthand typing of non-routine work,
routine administrative of a group of sales or purchase accounts.
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As well as being given the broad parameters described above, users of the I.A.M. system have
access to some 1000 task definitions against which they can compare practically every office
task they are likely to incorporate in their business. Any management using this system will be
able to work out appropriate salary scales for each of the grades identified, and thus devise a
reasonable structure of pay differentials. The main advantage of job grading is its relative
simplicity and cheapness.
Analytical methods of job evaluation examine jobs in terms of their principal components, and
not as whole entities. The most widely-used analytical methods are the Points Rating Method
and the Hay-MSL Guide Chart System. In both of these methods differences between jobs in an
organization can be described, distinguished and measured in relative terms, with a fair degree of
credibility, such methods require much more time and effort than non-analytical methods, and
are therefore more costly to operate, but many organizations prefer them because they provide a
sounder and more defensible basis for wage and salary administration than non-analytical
methods.
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Responsibility/accountability
Breadth of responsibility
Specialized responsibility
Complexity of the work
Degree of freedom to act
Number and nature of subordinate staff
Extent of accountability for equipment/plant
Extent of accountability for product/materials
Effort
Mental demands of job
Physical demands of job
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Working conditions
Timescale of operations
Turbulent or steady- state
Amount of necessary traveling
Diversity of subordinates
Pressures from other groups
Difficulty or hazardous surroundings
Most point’s methods incorporate the above factors in one form or another. When devising
an “in-house” system, the inclusion of particular factors and decisions about their weightings
will be the subject of negotiation between various interested parties. Where trade unions are
involved, they will want to be consulted about these matters and to have some influence over
the choice of factors in their weightings. Additionally, a significant numbers of women are
employed care needs to be taken to ensure that the job factors selected do not implicitly favor
ones sex against another, for example by giving higher weightings to length of service and
physical demands (which favor men) in comparison to mental complexity and accountability
for others (which may be considered as neutral). In a leaflet on the amended Equal Pay Act,
the Equal Opportunities Commission provides examples of such “neutral” factors. Neutral
factors provide a fairer basis for ensuring “equal pay for work of equal value”.
Different management groups also have their preferred weightings. Line managers tend to
stress the importance, and therefore weighting, of responsibility, whereas specialists
managers tend to emphasize skills. Ideally, whatever the eventual choice of
factors/weightings, one standardized set of criteria should emerge to be applied consistently
to all the jobs in the population concerned.
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organizational and indeed national boundaries. This is an important future for organizations
that wish to adopt a unified approach that can be applied company-wide, and who are
prepared to make full use of Hay consultants in setting up the exercise and seeing through to
its to its conclusion. The basic structure of the Hay system is as follows:
1. Three broad factors are employed for the analysis: Know-how, Problem-solving
and Accountability, each scored on a Guide-Chart.
2. Each factor is considered by breadth and depth.
3. Know-how refers to the knowledge and skills required to attain “average
acceptable performance”.
4. Problem solving refers to the analytical and evaluation aspects of the job, and is
seen in two dimensions the extent to which thinking is prescribed and the nature
of the thinking challenge (variability creativity, etc).
5. Accountability refers to “the answerability for actions and the consequences of
that action”. It has three dimensions: (a) the extent of freedom to act, (b) the job
impact on end-results, and (c) the magnitude of the job primarily seen in terms of
responsibility for financial results.
The Hay system, as with any other points rating system cannot measure jobs with complete
and objective assurance. What it can do is to reduce the subjective and arbitrary elements by
a substantial margin, and thus achieve a fairer result with a Non-analytical method. After
evaluation, the Hay system ranks benchmarks jobs in accordance with point’s totals. The
final rank order is agreed after any Red-circling anomalies have been put right, and salaries
are then derived from the application of a tailor-made formula agreed between the individual
organization and the Hay consultants.
Conclusion
Job evaluation can play an important role in the development of systematical and equitable pay
systems. Analytical systems, in particular, provide a means of identifying key job factors,
weighting them as appropriate, and the comparing jobs against them, and eventually arriving at
an understanding of relative value of all the jobs in a particular population. On the basis of this
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evidence of relative worth, pay differential can be worked out in way that is demonstrably fairer
than arbitrary decision of individuals or powerful section groups. To the extent that job
evaluation bureaucratizes the formulation of pay scales, it reduces the negotiation power of both
trade unions and other influential groups by lobbying them of the possibility of appearing to
emotional consideration, which has very little to do with the nature, scope and contribution of
jobs in the organizational hierarchy.
Non-analytical methods, popular though they may be, lack the credibility of Analytical methods.
No employer, for example, can resist an equal pay demand with any confidence if he is
employing Non-analytical methods of job evaluation. The Equal Opportunity legislation will not
consider such methods as “proper job evaluations”
Review Questions
i) Distinguish between analytical and non analytical methods of job evaluation
ii) Describe the purpose of Job Evaluation
iii) Explain the Institute of Administrative Management job grading scheme
iv) Explain the Guide Chart method of Job Evaluation
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LESSON THIRTEEN
Lesson Objectives
At the end of this lesson, the student should be able to:
a) Define the concept of strategy and based of the HR strategy formulation process.
b) Understand the relationship human resource strategy and overall organizational
strategy.
c) Recognize the important of corporate culture and its relation to strategy.
d) Experience these concepts in a management situation.
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A culture that prevent a company form meeting competitive threats or from adapting to changing
economic or social environments can lead to the company’s stagnation and ultimate failure
unless it make a conscious effort to change. This HRM culture change effort include activities,
which are design to improve the skill, abilities, structure, and motivation levels of organization
members . The goals are improved technical skills and improved interpersonal competence and
communication. Such HRM effort may also be directed towards improved leadership, decision-
making and problem solving among organization member. The assumption underlying such
effort is that by developing an improved culture, a more effective organization will result.
The need for strategy management has increasing become a fact of organization life. The
strategy plan is often the starting point for the evaluation of the actions of management personnel
and their organizations. Strategy management provides the basic direction and framework within
which all organization activities take place. An understanding of strategic management,
potentially the most advanced and sophisticated type, makes it easier for managers to develop a
vision of the future for their organization. In this lesson we examine stage six of Success System
Model: changing for success. An overview of the strategy HR management is, how it is used an
dhow it fits into the strategy management process. If you gain a thorough understanding of this
process, you are more likely to become an effective HR manager.
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3.] The corporate culture. In well – organized associations, people make things happen. There is
a commitment to cooperate values and objectives and a willingness to take risks. There is a sense
of autonomy in entrepreneurship and a belief in the importance of HR values and services.
4.] Strategic flexibility. The companies that cope best with the rapidly changing environment try
to anticipate changes even if this means reformulating strategy or altering the corporate culture.
These companies are result-oriented and market driven. There is a belief in productivity through
people that encourage change and supports risk taking in order to gain succession of both current
and new product markets.
Review Questions
i) Explain the characteristics that are exhibited in all best run organization.
ii) Define the concept of strategy and based of the HR strategy formulation
process.
iii) Explain why the need for strategy management has increasing become a fact
of organization life.
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SAMPLE PAPER 1
MT KENYA UNIVERSITY
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS AND PUBLIC MANAGEMENT
BBM 311: HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
Instructions to candidates: Answer Question ONE and any other TWO questions
QUESTION ONE
a) Highlight 5 roles of a human resource manager within an organization. (5 marks)
b) Enumerate 5 activities that are involved in succession planning when determining a
suitable supply of successors for key jobs in an organization. (10 marks)
c) Why is it important to compensate employees? (5 marks)
d) Although training and development are similar and both are critical to the success of an
organization, there are some important differences. Differentiate between the two terms
citing relevant examples in each case. (6 marks)
e) Mention at least 4 elements of employee relations. (4 marks)
QUESTION TWO
Discuss the following issues as used in modern human resource management, citing relevant
examples in each case.
i. Issue of comparable worth or equal pay (5 marks)
ii. Two tier pay (5 marks)
iii. Fair and square (5 marks)
iv. Variable pay (5 marks)
QUESTION THREE
a) Describe the core functions of the ministry of labour (10 marks)
b) Describe 5objectives of the Federation of Kenya Employers (10 marks)
QUESTION FOUR
a) Explain 3 points that a human resource manager should consider in the effective
administration of incentive plans. (6 marks)
b) Explain any types of incentives that a human resource manager can use to motivate staff in an
organization. (14 marks)
QUESTION FIVE
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SAMPLE PAPER 2
MT KENYA UNIVERSITY
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS AND PUBLIC MANAGEMENT
BBM 311: HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
Instructions to candidates: Answer Question ONE and any other TWO questions
QUESTION ONE
a) In Job evaluation, distinguish between job ranking and job grading.
(4marks)
b) Mention 6 factors to take into account when forecasting personnel needs within an
organization. (6 marks)
c) When recruiting candidates which are the sources that an organization can use to identify
suitable candidates for jobs. (5 marks)
d) Describe the performance appraisal review process involved in developing employees in
an organization. (5 marks)
e) Explain 3 methods of dispute resolution that involves the use of third parties. (6 marks)
f) Describe 4 important features of collective bargaining. (4 marks)
QUESTION TWO
a) Explain 5 objectives of training and development in an organization. (10 marks)
b) Discuss 5 important reasons for carrying out performance appraisals. (10 marks)
QUESTION THREE
a) Discuss 5 elements of employee relations (10 marks)
b) Describe 5 areas covered by employee relations policies when addressing labour related
issues in an organization. (10 marks)
QUESTION FOUR
a) Firms can’t always get the employees they need from their current staff, and sometimes
they don’t just want to. What 5 sources can a firm use to source outside candidates?
(10 marks)
b) Explain 5 skills involved in selection interviewing? (10 marks)
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QUESTION FIVE
a) Define the term job design (2 marks)
b) Distinguish between job enlargement and job enrichment (4 marks)
c) Discuss the merits and demerits of information technology in human resource
management (14 marks)
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