SLM-III Sem BBA Human Resource Management
SLM-III Sem BBA Human Resource Management
SLM-III Sem BBA Human Resource Management
BBA
( III SEMESTER )
BA
POLIICAL SCIENCE
HUMAN RESOURCE
MANAGEMENT 316 B
(CORE COURSE : BB3B04)
CUCBCSS
(2015 ADMISSION
ONWARDS)
HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
STUDY MATERIAL
THIRD SEMESTER
CORE COURSE : BB3B04
For
BBA
(2015 ADMISSION ONWARDS)
UNIVERSITY OF CALICUT
SCHOOL OF DISTANCE EDUCATION
Calicut University P.O, Malappuram, Kerala, India 673635
316B
School of Distance Education
UNIVERSITY OF CALICUT
SCHOOL OF DISTANCE EDUCATION
STUDY MATERIAL
THIRD SEMESTER
BBA
(2015 ADMISSION ONWARDS)
CORE COURSE:
BB3B04 : HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
Prepared by:
Sri. Vineethan.T
Assistant Professor,
Department of Commerce,
Government College, Madappally.
Scrutinized by:
Dr. Venugopalan.K
Associate Professor,
Department of Commerce,
Government College, Madappally.
CONTENTS PAGES
MODULE - I 5 - 17
MODULE - II 18 - 42
MODULE - III 43 - 46
MODULE - IV 47 - 57
MODULE - V 58 - 78
MODULE - 1
INTRODUCTION TO HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
Human Resource Management is a relatively new approach to managing human beings in any
organisation. Human beings are considered as the key resource in this approach. Since an
organisation is a body of people, their acquisition, development of skills, motivation for higher levels
of attainments, as well as ensuring maintenance of their level of commitment are all significant
activities. All these activities fall in the domain of Human Resource Management.
Human Resource Management is a process, which consists of four main activities, namely,
acquisition, development, motivation, and maintenance of human resources.
Scott, Clothier and Spriegel have defined Human Resource Management as that branch of
management which is responsible on a staff basis for concentrating on those aspects of operations
which are primarily concerned with the relationship of management to employees and employees to
employees and with the development of the individual and the group.
Human Resource Management is responsible for maintaining good human relations in the
organisation. It is also concerned with development of individuals and achieving integration of goals
of the organisation and those of the individuals.
Northcott considers human resource management as an extension of general management, that
of prompting and stimulating every employee to make his fullest contribution to the purpose of a
business. Human resource management is not something that could be separated from the basic
managerial function. It is a major component of the broader managerial function.
According to Edwin B. Flippo, ―Human resource management is the planning, organising,
directing and controlling of the procurement, development, resources to the end that individual and
societal objectives are accomplished. This definition reveals that human resource (HR) management
is that aspect of management, which deals with the planning, organising, directing and controlling the
personnel functions of the enterprise.
FEATURES OF HRM
The features of human resource management can be highlighted as follows:
1. It is an inherent part of management: Human resource management is inherent in the process
of management. This function is performed by all the managers throughout the organisation rather
that by the personnel department only. If a manager is to get the best of his people, he must
undertake the basic responsibility of selecting people who will work under him.
2. It is a pervasive function: Human Resource Management is a pervasive function of
management. It is performed by all managers at various levels in the organisation. It is not a
responsibility that a manager can leave completely to someone else. However, he may secure
advice and help in managing people from experts who have special competence in personnel
management and industrial relations.
3. It is basic to all functional areas: Human Resource Management permeates all the functional
area of management such as production management, financial management, and marketing
management. That is every manager from top to bottom, working in any department has to
perform the personnel functions.
4. It is people centered: Human Resource Management is people centered and is relevant in all
types of organisations. It is concerned with all categories of personnel from top to the bottom of
the organisation. The broad classification of personnel in an industrial enterprise may be as
follows: (i) Blue-collar workers (i.e. those working on machines and engaged in loading,
unloading etc.) and white-collar workers (i.e. clerical employees), (ii) Managerial and non-
managerial personnel, (iii) Professionals (such as Chartered Accountant, Company Secretary,
Lawyer, etc.) and non-professional personnel.
5. It involves Personnel Activities or Functions: Human Resource Management involves
several functions concerned with the management of people at work. It includes manpower
planning, employment, placement, training, appraisal and compensation of employees. For the
performance of these activities efficiently, a separate department known as Personnel Department
is created in most of the organisations.
6. It is a continuous process: Human Resource Management is not a “one shot” function. It must
be performed continuously if the organisational objectives are to be achieved smoothly.
7. It is based on Human Relations: Human Resource Management is concerned with the
motivation of human resources in the organisation. The human beings can‘t be dealt with like
physical factors of production. Every person has different needs, perceptions and expectations.
The managers should give due attention to these factors. They require human relations skills to
deal with the people at work. Human relations skills are also required in training performance
appraisal, transfer and promotion of subordinates
Objectives of HRM
The primary objective of HRM is to ensure the availability of competent and willing
workforce to an organization. The specific objectives include the following:
1) Human capital: assisting the organization in obtaining the right number and types of employees to
fulfil its strategic and operational goals.
2) Developing organizational climate: helping to create a climate in which employees are encouraged
to develop and utilize their skills to the fullest and to employ the skills and abilities of the workforce
efficiently
3) Helping to maintain performance standards and increase productivity through effective job design;
providing adequate orientation, training and development; providing performance-related feedback;
and ensuring effective two-way communication.
4) Helping to establish and maintain a harmonious employer/employee relationship
5) Helping to create and maintain a safe and healthy work environment
6) Developing programs to meet the economic, psychological, and social needs of the employees and
helping the organization to retain the productive employees
7) Ensuring that the organization is in compliance with provincial/territorial and federal laws
affecting the workplace (such as human rights, employment equity, occupational health and safety,
employment standards, and labour relations legislation) to help the organization to reach its goals.
8) To provide organization with well-trained and well-motivated employees
9) To increase the employees satisfaction and self-actualization
10) To develop and maintain the quality of work life
11) To communicate HR policies to all employees.
12) To help maintain ethical polices and behaviour.
The above stated HRM objectives can be summarized under four specific objectives:
1) Societal Objectives: seek to ensure that the organization becomes socially responsible to the needs
and challenges of the society while minimizing the negative impact of such demands upon the
organization. The failure of the organizations to use their resources for the society’s benefit in ethical
ways may lead to restriction.
2) Organizational Objectives: it recognizes the role of HRM in bringing about organizational
effectiveness. It makes sure that HRM is not a standalone department, but rather a means to assist the
organization with its primary objectives. The HR department exists to serve the rest of the
organization.
3) Functional Objectives: is to maintain the department’s contribution at a level appropriate to the
organization’s needs. Human resources are to be adjusted to suit the organization’s demands. The
department’s value should not become too expensive at the cost of the organization it serves.
4) Personnel Objectives: it is to assist employees in achieving their personal goals, at least as far as
these goals enhance the individual’s contribution to the organization. Personal objectives of
employees must be met if they are to be maintained, retained and motivated. Otherwise employee
performance and satisfaction may decline giving rise to employee turnover.
Importance of HRM
Human Resource Management has a place of great importance. According to Peter F. Drucker,
―The proper or improper use of the different factors of production depends on the wishes of the
human resources. Hence, besides other resources human resources need more development. Human
resources can increase cooperation but it needs proper and efficient management to guide it.
Importance of personnel management is in reality the importance of labour functions of personnel
department which are indispensable to the management activity itself. Because of the following
reasons human resource management holds a place of importance.
1.It helps management in the preparation adoption and continuing evolution of personnel
programmes and policies.
Human Resource Management 7
School of Distance Education
American Society for Training and Development (ASTD) conducted fairly an exhaustive study in this
field and identified nine broad areas of activities of HRM.
These are given below:
a) Human Resource Planning: The objective of HR Planning is to ensure that the organization has
the right types of persons at the right time at the right place. It prepares human resources inventory
with a view to assess present and future needs, availability and possible shortages in human resource.
Thereupon, HR Planning forecast demand and supplies and identify sources of selection. HR
Planning develops strategies both long-term and short-term, to meet the man-power requirement.
b) Design of Organization and Job: This is the task of laying down organization structure,
authority, relationship and responsibilities. This will also mean definition of work contents for each
position in the organization. This is done by “job description”. Another important step is “Job
specification”. Job specification identifies the attributes of persons who will be most suitable for each
job which is defined by job description.
c) Selection and Staffing: This is the process of recruitment and selection of staff. This involves
matching people and their expectations with which the job specifications and career path available
within the organization.
d) Training and Development: This involves an organized attempt to find out training needs of the
individuals to meet the knowledge and skill which is needed not only to perform current job but also
to fulfil the future needs of the organization.
e) Organizational Development: This is an important aspect whereby “Synergetic effect” is
generated in an organization i.e. healthy interpersonal and inter-group relationship within the
organization.
f) Compensation and Benefits: This is the area of wages and salaries administration where wages
and compensations are fixed scientifically to meet fairness and equity criteria. In addition labour
welfare measures are involved which include benefits and services.
g) Employee Assistance: Each employee is unique in character, personality, expectation and
temperament. By and large each one of them faces problems every day. Some are personal some are
official. In their case he or she remains worried. Such worries must be removed to make him or her
more productive and happy.
h) Union-Labour Relations: Healthy Industrial and Labour relations are very important for
enhancing peace and productivity in an organization. This is one of the areas of HRM.
i) Personnel Research and Information System: Knowledge on behavioral science and industrial
psychology throws better insight into the workers expectations, aspirations and behaviour.
Advancement of technology of product and production methods have created working environment
which are much different from the past. Globalization of economy has increased competition many
fold. Science of ergonomics gives better ideas of doing a work more conveniently by an employee.
Thus, continuous research in HR areas is an unavoidable requirement. It must also take special care
Douglas McGregor Theory X and Theory Y (1960) and Abraham Maslow’s Hierarchy of needs (
1954) – These studies and observations led to the transition from the administrative and
passive Personnel Management approach to a more dynamic Human Resource Management
approach which considered workers as a valuable resource.
As a result of these principles and studies, Human resource management became increasingly line
management function, linked to core business operations. Some of the major activities of HR
department are listed as-
1. Recruitment and selection of skilled workforce.
2. Motivation and employee benefits
3. Training and development of workforce
4. Performance related salaries and appraisals.
Strategic Human Resource Management Approach
With increase in technology and knowledge base industries and as a result of global competition,
Human Resource Management is assuming more critical role today . Its major accomplishment is
aligning individual goals and objectives with corporate goals and objectives. Strategic HRM focuses
on actions that differentiate the organization from its competitors and aims to make long term impact
on the success of organization.
Functions of HRM
The main functions of human resource management are classified into two categories: (a) Managerial
Functions and (b) Operative Functions
(a) Managerial Functions: Following are the managerial functions of Human Resource Management
1. Planning: The planning function of human resource department pertains to the steps taken in
determining in advance personnel requirements, personnel programmes, policies etc. After
determining how many and what type of people are required, a personnel manager has to devise ways
and means to motivate them.
2. Organisation: Under organisation, the human resource manager has to organise the operative
functions by designing structure of relationship among jobs, personnel and physical factors in such a
way so as to have maximum contribution towards organisational objectives. In this way a personnel
manager performs following functions: (a) preparation of task force; (b) allocation of work to
individuals; (c) integration of the efforts of the task force; (d) coordination of work of individual with
that of the department.
3. Directing: Directing is concerned with initiation of organised action and stimulating the people
to work. The personnel manager directs the activities of people of the organisation to get its function
performed properly. A personnel manager guides and motivates the staff of the organisation to follow
the path laid down in advance.
4. Controlling: It provides basic data for establishing standards, makes job analysis and
performance appraisal, etc. All these techniques assist in effective control of the qualities, time and
efforts of workers.
(b) Operative Functions: The following are the Operative Functions of Human Resource
Management:
1. Procurement of Personnel: It is concerned with the obtaining of the proper kind and number of
personnel necessary to accomplish organisation goals. It deals specifically with such subjects as the
determination of manpower requirements, their recruitment, selecting, placement and orientation, etc.
2. Development of Personnel: Development has to do with the increase through training, skill that
is necessary for proper job performance. In this process various techniques of training are used to
develop the employees. Framing a sound promotion policy, determination of the basis of promotion
and making performance appraisal are the elements of personnel development function.
3. Compensation to Personnel: Compensation means determination of adequate and equitable
remuneration of personnel for their contribution to organisation objectives. To determine the
monetary compensation for various jobs is one of the most difficult and important function of the
personnel management. A number of decisions are taken into the function, viz., job-evaluation,
remuneration, policy, inventive and premium plans, bonus policy and co-partnership, etc. It also
assists the organisation for adopting the suitable wages and salaries, policy and payment of wages and
salaries in right time.
4. Maintaining Good Industrial Relation: Human Resource Management covers a wide field. It is
intended to reduce strifies, promote industrial peace, provide fair deal to workers and establish
industrial democracy. It the personnel manager is unable to make harmonious relations between
management and labour industrial unrest will take place and millions of man-days will be lost. If
labour management relations are not good the moral and physical condition of the employee will
suffer, and it will be a loss to an organisation vis-a-visa nation. Hence, the personnel manager must
create harmonious relations with the help of sufficient communication system and co-partnership.
5. Record Keeping: In record-keeping the personnel manager collects and maintains information
concerned with the staff of the organisation. It is essential for every organisation because it assists the
management in decision making such as in promotions.
6. Personnel Planning and Evaluation : Under this system different type of activities are evaluated
such as evaluation of performance, personnel policy of an organisation and its practices, personnel
audit, morale, survey and performance appraisal, etc.
APPROACHES TO HRM
John Storey (1989) distinguished two approaches that describe the concept of Human Resources
Management.
Hard HRM
The hard version of HRM traces its roots from the concept of scientific management
postulated by Fredrick W Taylor in the early 20th century.
Human Resource Management 12
School of Distance Education
changes in environment if they do not update themselves some of the important challenges which
might be faced by the managers in the management of people in business and industry are discussed
below:
1. Increasing Size of Workforce: The size of organisations is increasing. A large number of
multinational organisations have grown over the years. The number of people working in the
organisation has also increased. The management of increased workforce might create new problems
and challenges as the workers are becoming more conscious of their rights.
2. Increase in Education Level: The governments of various countries are taking steps to
eradicate illiteracy and increase the education level of their citizens. Educated consumers and workers
will create very tough task for the future managers.
3. Technological Advances: With the changes coming in the wake of advanced technology,
new jobs are created and many old jobs become redundant. There is a general apprehension of
immediate unemployment. In the competitive world of today, industry cannot hope to survive for
long with old technology. The problem, of unemployment resulting from modernisation will be
solved by properly assessing manpower needs and training of redundant employees in alternate skills.
4. Changes in Political Environment: There may be greater Government‘s interference in
business to safeguard the interests of workers, consumers and the public at large. Government‘s
participation in trade, commerce and industry will also pose many challenges before management.
The Government may restrict the scope of private sector in certain areas in public interest. It does not
mean chances of co-operation between the Government and private sector are ruled out. In fact, there
will be more and more joint sector enterprises.
5. Increasing Aspirations of Employees: Considerable changes have been noted in the
worker of today in comparison to his counterpart of 1950s. The workers are becoming more aware of
their higher level needs and this awareness would intensify further in the future workers.
6. Changing Psychosocial System: In future, organisations will be required to make use of
advanced technology in accomplishing their goals while satisfying human needs. In the traditional
bureaucratic model, the organisations were designed to achieve technical functions with a little
consideration given to the psychosocial system. But future management would be required to ensure
effective participation of lower levels in the management of the organisation system.
7. Computerised Information System: In the past, the automation of manufacturing
processes had a major effect upon the systems of production, storage, handling and packaging, etc.
More recently, there has been and in the future there will be the impact of revolutionary computerised
information system on management. This revolutionary development would cover two primary areas
of personnel management which are as follows : (a) The use of electronic computers for the collection
and processing of data, and (b) The direct application of computers in the managerial decision making
process.
8. Mobility of Professional Personnel: Organisations will expand the use of “boundary
agents” whose primary function will be achieving coordination with the environment. One interesting
fact will be an increase in the mobility of various managerial and professional personnel between
organisations. As individuals develop greater technical and professional expertise, their services will
be in greater demand by other organisations in the environment.
9. Changes in Legal Environment: Many changes are taking place in the legal framework
within which the industrial relations systems in the country are now functioning. It is the duty of the
human resource or personnel executive to be aware of these changes and to bring about necessary
adjustments within the organisations so that greater utilisation of human resources can be achieved.
This, indeed, is and would remain a major challenge for the personnel executive.
10. Management of Human Relations: On the ‘industrial relations’ front, things are not
showing much improvement even after so many efforts by the government in this direction. Though a
large number of factors are responsible for industrial unrest but a very significant cause is the growth
of multi unions in industrial complexes having different political affiliations. Under the present
conditions, it appears that inter-union rivalries would grow more in the coming years and might
create more problems in the industry. Management of human relations in the future will be more
complicated than it is today. Many of the new generation of employees will be more difficult to
motivate than their predecessors. This will be in part the result of a change in value systems coupled
with rising educational levels.
New Role of Human Resource Management
Human Resource Management in the “New Millenium” has undergone a great revolution by
questioning the accepted practices and re-inventing the organisations as well as structures. Many
traditional practices have been thrown out. As an example, it can be seen that hierarchies are
vanishing and there is greater emphasis on flat organisations. It means a great deal of specialisation
and skills. It also means upgrading the norms and standards of work as well as performance. The new
role of human resource management is much more strategic than before.
Some of the new directions of the role of HRM can be summed up as follows:
1. A Facilitator of Change: To carry people through upheaval requires the true management
of human resources.
2. An Integrated Approach to Management: Rather than being an isolated function, human
resource is regarded as a core activity, one which shapes a company‘s values. In particular, this can
have an impact on customer service.
3. A Mediator: Establishing and balancing the new and emerging aspirations and
requirements of the company and the individual.
Functions of a Human Resource Manager
A human resource manager, charged with fulfilling the objectives of an organisation, should
be a leader with high intellectual powers, a visionary and a philosopher who provides the initiative to
shape the future in terms of leading the human beings in an organisation towards more prosperous
and progressive policies.
1. As an Intellectual: The basic skill in the human resource field as compared to
technologists or financial experts is the skill to communicate, articulate, understand and above all, to
be an expert when it comes to putting policies and agreements in black and white. The personnel
man’s skill lies in his command over the language. A personnel man has to deal with employees and
he must possess the skills of conducting fruitful and systematic discussions and of communicating
effectively. He should also be in a position to formulate principles and foresee the problems of the
organisation. This means that he would require the mental ability to deal with his people in an
intelligent manner as well as to understand what they are trying to say.
2. As an Educator: It is not enough that a human resource man has command-over the
language, which, however, remains his primary tool. He should be deeply interested in learning and
also in achieving growth. Basically, human beings like to grow and realise their full potential. In
order to harmonise the growth of individuals with that of the organisation, a personnel administrator
must not only provide opportunities for his employees to learn, get the required training and
assimilate new ideas but also he himself should be a teacher. A personnel man who simply pushes
files and attends labour courts for conciliation purposes and other rituals of legal procedure for the
settlement of industrial disputes is not a personnel administrator of the future.
3. As a Discriminator: A human resource administrator must have the capacity to
discriminate between right and wrong, between that which is just and unjust and merit and non-merit.
In other words, he should be a good judge when he sits on a selection board, a fair person when he
advises on disciplinary matters and a good observer of right conduct in an organisation.
4. As an Executive: The human resource man must execute the decisions of the management
and its policies with speed, accuracy and objectivity. He has to streamline the office, tone up the
administration and set standards of performance. He has to coordinate the control functions in relation
to the various other divisions and, in doing so he should be in a position to bring unity of purpose and
direction in the activities of the personnel department. He must ask relevant questions and not be
merely involved in the office routine whereby the status quo is maintained. He should have the
inquisitiveness to find out causes of delay, tardy work and wasteful practices, and should be keen to
eliminate those activities from the personnel functions which have either outlived their utility or are
not consistent with the objectives and purposes of the organisation.
5. As a Leader : Being basically concerned with people or groups of people, and being placed
in the group dynamics of various political and social functions of an organisation, a Human resource
man must not shirk the role of leadership in an organisation. He, by setting his own example and by
working towards the objectives of sound personnel management practices, must inspire his people
and motivate them towards better performance. He should resolve the conflicts of different groups
and build up teamwork in the organisation.
6. As a Humanist: Deep faith in human values and empathy with human problems, especially
in less developed countries, are the sine qua non for a Human resource man. He has to deal with
people who toil at various levels and partake of their joys and sorrows. He must perform his functions
with sensitivity and feeling.
7. As a Visionary: While every leading function of an organisation must evolve its vision of
the future, the primary responsibility for developing the social organisation towards purposive and
progressive action falls on the personnel man. He should be a thinker who sets the pace for policy-
making in an organisation in the area of human relations and should gradually work out new patterns
of human relations management consistent with the needs of the organisation and the society. He
must ponder on the social obligations of the enterprise, especially if it is in the public sector, where
one has to work within the framework of social accountability. He should be in close touch with
socio-economic changes in the country. He should be able to reasonably forecast future events and
should constantly strive to meet the coming challenges.
MODULE - II
HUMAN RESOURCE PLANNING
Introduction
Human Resource Planning is concerned with the planning the future manpower requirements are the
organisation. Human Resource manager ensures that the company has the right type of people in the
right number at the right time and place, who are trained and motivated to do the right kind of work at
the right time. Obviously, human resource planning primarily makes appropriate projections for
future manpower needs of the organisation envisages plan for developing the manpower to suit the
changing needs of the organisation from time to time, and foresees how to monitor and evaluate the
future performance. It also includes the replacement plans and managerial succession plans. Human
Resource planning is the process by which a management determines how an organisation should
move from its current manpower position to its desired manpower position. Through planning a
management strives to have the right number and the right kinds of people at the right places, at the
right time, to do things which result in both the organisation and the individual receiving the
maximum long-range benefit.
Definitions of Human Resource Planning:
According to Wikstrom, Human Resource Planning consists of a series of activities, viz.,
(a) Forecasting future manpower requirements, either in terms of mathematical projections of trends
in the economic environment and developments in industry, or in terms of judgemental estimates
based upon the specific future plans of a company;
(b) Making an inventory of present manpower resources and assessing the extent to which these
resources are employed optimally;
(c) Anticipating manpower problems by projecting present resources into the future and comparing
them with the forecast of requirements to determine their adequacy, both quantitatively and
qualitatively; and
(d) Planning the necessary programmes of requirements, selection, training, development, utilisation,
transfer, promotion, motivation and compensation to ensure that future manpower requirements are
properly met.
Coleman has defined Human Resource Planning as “the process of determining manpower
requirements and the means for meeting those requirements in order to carry out the integrated plan
of the organisation”.
Human resource planning is a double-edged weapon. If used properly, it leads to the maximum
utilisation of human resources, reduces excessive labour turnover and high absenteeism; improves
productivity and aids in achieving the objectives of an organisation. Faultily used, it leads to
disruption in the flow of work, lower production, less job satisfaction, high cost of production and
constant headaches for the management personnel. Therefore, for the success of an enterprise, human
resource planning is a very important function, which can be neglected only at its own peril.
Objectives of HR Planning
The major objectives of Human Resource Planning in an organisation are to:
(i) ensure optimum use of human resources currently employed;
(ii) Avoid balances in the distribution and allocation of human resources;
(iii) assess or forecast future skill requirements of the organisation‘s overall objectives;
(iv) Provide control measure to ensure availability of necessary resources when required;
(v) Control the cost aspect of human resources;
(vi) Formulate transfer and promotion policies.
Steps in Human Resource Planning
Human resource planning refers to a process by which companies ensure that they have the
right number and kinds of people at the right place, at the right time; capable of performing diverse
jobs professionally. Planning the use of human resources is an important function in every
organisation. A rational estimate to various categories of personnel in the organisation is an important
aspect of human resource planning. HRP involves the following steps:
1. Analysis of Organisational Plans and Objectives: Human resource planning is a part of overall
plan of organisation. Plans concerning technology, production, marketing, finance, expansion and
diversification give an idea about the volume of future work activity. Each plan can further be
analysed into sub-plans and detailed programmes. It is also necessary to decide the time horizon
for which human resource plans are to be prepared. The future organisation structure and job
design should be made clear and changes in the organisation structure should be examined so as
to anticipate its manpower requirements.
2. Forecasting Demand for Human Resources: Human resource planning starts with the
estimation of the number and type of personnel required at different levels and in different
departments. The main steps involved in HRP process are (a) to determine and to identify present
and prospective needs of human resource, (b) to discover and recruit the required number of
persons. (c) to select the right number and type from the available people. (d) to hire and place in
the positions for which they are qualified, (e) to provide information to the selected people about
the nature of work assigned to them, (f) to Promote or to transfer as per the needs and the
performance of employees, (g) to denote if the employees are disinterested or their performance is
not up to the mark, (h) to terminate if they are not needed or their performance is below standard
and shows no hopes of improvement. It is the most crucial and critical area of HRD. This HRD
manager must pay attention to place right man to the right job through recruitment selection
Training and Placement of employees. This calls for the adoption of a systematic procedure to
complete recruitment and selection.
3. Forecasting Supply of Human Resources: One of the important areas of human resources
planning is to deal with allocation of persons to different departments depending upon the work-
load and requirements of the departments. While allocating manpower to different departments,
care has to be taken to consider appointments based on promotions and transfers. Allocation of
human resource should be so planned that available manpower is put to full use to ensure smooth
functioning of all departments.
4. Estimating Manpower Gaps: Net human resource requirements or manpower gaps can be
identified by comparing demand and supply forecasts. Such comparison will reveal either deficit
or surplus of human resources in future. Deficits suggest the number of persons to be recruited
from outside whereas surplus implies redundant to be redeployed or terminated. Similarly, gaps
may occur in terms of knowledge, skills and aptitudes. Employees deficient in qualifications can
be trained whereas employees with higher skills may be given more enriched jobs.
5. Matching Demand and Supply : It is one of the objectives of human resource planning to assess
the demand for and supply of human resources and match both to know shortages and surpluses
on both the side in kind and in number. This will enable the human resource department to know
overstaffing or understaffing. Once the manpower gaps are identified, plans are prepared to bridge
these gaps. Plans to meet the surplus manpower may be redeployment in other departments and
retrenchment in consultation, with the trade unions. People may be persuaded to quit through
voluntarily retirement. Deficit can be met through recruitment, selection, transfer, promotion, and
training plans. Realistic plans for the procurement and development of manpower should be made
after considering the macro and micro environment which affect the manpower objectives of the
organisation.
Importance of Human Resource Planning
HRP is the subsystem in the total organizational planning. Organizational planning includes
managerial activities that set the company’s objective for the future and determines the appropriate
means for achieving those objectives. The importance of HRP is elaborated on the basis of the key
roles that it is playing in the organization.
1. Future Personnel Needs: Human resource planning is significant because it helps to determine the
future personnel needs of the organization. If an organization is facing the problem of either surplus
or deficiency in staff strength, then it is the result of the absence of effecting HR planning. All public
sector enterprises find themselves overstaffed now as they never had any planning for personnel
requirement and went of recruitment spree till late 1980’s. The problem of excess staff has become
such a prominent problem that many private sector units are resorting to VRS ‘voluntary retirement
scheme’. The excess of labour problem would have been there if the organization had good HRP
system. Effective HRP system will also enable the organization to have good succession planning.
2. Part of Strategic Planning: HRP has become an integral part of strategic planning of strategic
planning. HRP provides inputs in strategy formulation process in terms of deciding whether the
organization has got the right kind of human resources to carry out the given strategy. HRP is also
necessary during the implementation stage in the form of deciding to make resource allocation
decisions related to organization structure, process and human resources. In some organizations HRP
play as significant role as strategic planning and HR issues are perceived as inherent in business
management.
3. Creating Highly Talented Personnel: Even though India has a great pool of educated
unemployed, it is the discretion of HR manager that will enable the company to recruit the right
person with right skills to the organization. Even the existing staff hope the job so frequently that
organization face frequent shortage of manpower. Manpower planning in the form of skill
development is required to help the organization in dealing with this problem of skilled manpower
shortage
4. International Strategies: An international expansion strategy of an organization is facilitated to a
great extent by HR planning. The HR department’s ability to fill key jobs with foreign nationals and
reassignment of employees from within or across national borders is a major challenge that is being
faced by international business. With the growing trend towards global operation, the need for HRP
will as well will be the need to integrate HRP more closely with the organizations strategic plans.
Without effective HRP and subsequent attention to employee recruitment, selection, placement,
development, and career planning, the growing competition for foreign executives may lead to
expensive and strategically descriptive turnover among key decision makers.
5. Foundation for Personnel Functions: HRP provides essential information for designing and
implementing personnel functions, such as recruitment, selection, training and development,
personnel movement like transfers, promotions and layoffs.
6. Increasing Investments in Human Resources: Organizations are making increasing investments
in human resource development compelling the increased need for HRP. Organizations are realizing
that human assets can increase in value more than the physical assets. An employee who gradually
develops his/ her skills and abilities become a valuable asset for the organization. Organizations can
make investments in its personnel either through direct training or job assignment and the rupee value
of such a trained, flexible, motivated productive workforce is difficult to determine. Top officials
have started acknowledging that quality of work force is responsible for both short term and long
term performance of the organization.
7. Resistance to Change: Employees are always reluctant whenever they hear about change and even
about job rotation. Organizations cannot shift one employee from one department to another without
any specific planning. Even for carrying out job rotation (shifting one employee from one department
to another) there is a need to plan well ahead and match the skills required and existing skills of the
employees.
8. Succession Planning: Human Resource Planning prepares people for future challenges. The ‘stars’
are picked up, trained, assessed and assisted continuously so that when the time comes such trained
employees can quickly take the responsibilities and position of their boss or seniors as and when
situation arrives.
9. Other Benefits: (a) HRP helps in judging the effectiveness of manpower policies and programmes
of management. (b) It develops awareness on effective utilization of human resources for the overall
development of organization. (c) It facilitates selection and training of employees with adequate
knowledge, experience and aptitudes so as to carry on and achieve the organizational objectives (d)
HRP encourages the company to review and modify its human resource policies and practices and to
examine the way of utilizing the human resources for better utilization.
Factors affecting HRP
HRP is influenced by several factors. The most important of the factors that affect human resource
planning are:
1. Type and Strategy of the Organization: Type of the organization determines the production
processes involve, number and type of staff needed and the supervisory and managerial personnel
required. If the organization has a plan for organic growth then organization need to hire additional
employees. On the other hand if the organization is going for mergers and acquisition, then
organization need to plan for layoffs.
2. Organizational Growth Cycles and Planning: All organizations pass through different stages of
growth from the day of its inception. The stage of growth in which an organization is determines the
nature and extends of HRP. Small organizations in the earlier stages of growth may not have well
defined personnel planning. But as the organization enters the growth stage they feel the need to plan
its human resource. At this stage organization gives emphasis upon employee development. But as
the organization reaches the mature stage it experience less flexibility and variability resulting in low
growth rate. HR planning becomes more formalized and less flexible and less innovative and problem
like retirement and possible retrenchment dominate planning. During the declining stage of the
organization HRP takes a different focus like planning to do the layoff, retrenchment and retirement.
3. Environmental Uncertainties: Political, social and economic changes affect all organizations and
the fluctuations that are happening in these environments affect organizations drastically. Personnel
planners deal with such environmental uncertainties by carefully formulating recruitment, selection,
training and development policies and programmes.
4. Time Horizons: HR plans can be short term or long term. Short term plans spans from six months
to one year, while long term plans spread over three to twenty years. The extent of time period
depends upon the degree of uncertainty that is prevailing in an organizations environment.
5. Type and Quality of information: The quality and accuracy of information depend upon the
clarity with which the organizational decision makers have defined their strategy, structure, budgets,
production schedule and so on.
6. Nature of Jobs Being Filled: Personnel planners need to be really careful with respect to the
nature of the jobs being filled in the organization. Employees belonging to lower level who need very
limited skills can be recruited hastily but, while hiring employees for higher posts, selection and
recruitment need to be carried out with high discretion
7. Outsourcing: Many of the organizations have surplus labour and hence instead of hiring more
people they go for outsourcing. Outsourcing determines HRP.
Barriers to Human Resource Planning
Human Resource Planners face significant barriers while formulating an HRP. The major
barriers are elaborated below:
Human Resource Management 22
School of Distance Education
1) HR practitioners are perceived as experts in handling personnel matters, but are not experts
in managing business. The personnel plan conceived and formulated by the HR practitioners when
enmeshed with organizational plan, might make the overall strategic plan of the organization
ineffective.
2) HR information often is incompatible with other information used in strategy formulation.
Strategic planning efforts have long been oriented towards financial forecasting, often to the
exclusion of other types of information. Financial forecasting takes precedence over HRP.
3) Conflict may exist between short term and long term HR needs. For example, there can be
a conflict between the pressure to get the work done on time and long term needs, such as preparing
people for assuming greater responsibilities. Many managers are of the belief that HR needs can be
met immediately because skills are available on the market as long as wages and salaries are
competitive. Therefore, long times plans are not required, short planning are only needed.
4) There is conflict between quantitative and qualitative approaches to HRP. Some people
view HRP as a number game designed to track the flow of people across the department. Others take
a qualitative approach and focus on individual employee concerns such as promotion and career
development. Best result can be achieved if there is a balance between the quantitative and qualitative
approaches.
6) Non-involvement of operating managers renders HRP ineffective. HRP is not strictly an
HR department function. Successful planning needs a co-ordinated effort on the part of operating
managers and HR personnel.
Job analysis
Developing an organizational structure, results in jobs which have to be staffed. Job analysis
is the procedure through which you determine the duties and nature of the jobs and the kinds of
people (in terms of skills and experience) who should be hired for them. Some of the definitions of
job analysis are:
According to Michael L. Jucius, “Job analysis refers to the process of studying the operations,
duties and organizational aspects of jobs in order to derive specifications or as they called by some,
job descriptions.”
According to DeCenzo and P. Robbins, “A job analysis is a systematic exploration of the
activities within a job. It is a basic technical procedure, one that is used to define the duties,
responsibilities, and accountabilities of a job.”
Information provided by Job Analysis
Job analysis provides the following information:
1. Job Identification : Its title, including its code number;
2. Significant Characteristics of a Job: It location, physical setting, supervision, union jurisdiction,
hazards and discomforts;
3. What the Typical Worker Does : Specific operation and tasks that make up an assignment,
their relative timing and importance, their simplicity, routine or complexity, the responsibility or
safety of others for property, funds, confidence and trust;
4. Which Materials and Equipment a Worker Uses: Metals, plastics, grains, yarns, milling
machines, punch presses and micrometers;
5. How a Job is Performed: Nature of operation - lifting, handling, cleaning, washing, feeding,
removing, drilling, driving, setting-up and many others;
6. Required Personal Attributes: Experience, training, apprenticeship, physical strength, co-
ordination or dexterity, physical demands, mental capabilities, aptitudes, social skills;
7. Job Relationship: Experience required, opportunities for advancement, patterns of promotions,
essential co-operation, direction, or leadership from and for a job.
Sources of Information for Job Analysis
According to George R. Terry, “the make-up of a job, its relation to other jobs, and its
requirements for competent performance are essential information needed for a job analysis”.
Information on a job may be obtained from three principal sources:
(a) From the employees who actually perform a job;
(b) From other employees such as supervisors and foremen who watch the workers doing a job and
thereby acquire knowledge about it; and
(c) From outside observers specially appointed to watch employees performing a job. Such outside
persons are called the trade job analysts.
Methods of Job Analysis
Four methods or approaches are utilised in analysing jobs. They are:
1. Personal Observation: The materials and equipment used, the working conditions and probable
hazards, and an understanding of what the work involves are the facts which should be known by an
analyst.
2. Sending out of Questionnaires: Properly drafted questionnaires are sent out to job-holders for
completion and are returned to supervisors.
3. Maintenance of Long Records: The employee maintains a daily record of duties he performs,
marking the time at which each task is started and finished.
4. Critical Incidents: In this method, job holders are asked to describe incidents concerning the job
on the basis of their past experience. The incidents so collected are analyzed and classified according
to the job areas they describe
5. Personal Interviews: Personal interviews may be held by the analyst with the employees, and
answers to relevant questions may be recorded. But the method is time-consuming and costly.
6.Technical Conference Method: This method utilizes supervisors with extensive knowledge of the
job. Here, specific characteristics of a job are obtained from the “experts.”
7. Functional Job Analysis: Functional job analysis (FJA) is employee- oriented analytical approach
of job analysis. This approach attempts to describe the whole person on the job.
Purposes and Uses of Job Analysis
The information provided by job analysis is useful in almost every phase of employee relations. Its
purposes and uses can be understood from the following points:
1. Organisation and Manpower Planning: It is helpful in organisational planning for it
defines labour needs in concrete terms and coordinates the activities of the work force, and clearly
divides duties and responsibilities.
2. Recruitment and Selection: By indicating the specific requirements of each job (i.e., the
skills and knowledge), it provides a realistic basis for hiring, training, placement, transfer and
promotion of personnel.
3. Wage and Salary Administration: By indicating the qualifications required for doing
specified jobs and the risks and hazards involved in its performance, it helps in salary and wage
administration. Job analysis is used as a foundation for job evaluation.
4. Job Re-engineering: Job analysis provides information which enables us to change jobs in
order to permit their being manned by personnel with specific characteristics and qualifications.
5. Employee Training and Management Development: Job analysis provides the necessary
information to the management of training and development programmes.
6. Performance Appraisal: It helps in establishing clear-cut standards which may be
compared with the actual contribution of each individual.
7. Health and Safety: It provides an opportunity for indentifying hazardous conditions and
unhealthy environmental factors so that corrective measures may be taken to minimise and avoid the
possibility of accidents.
Process of Job Analysis
Following are the important steps in the process of job analysis:
1. Determine the Use of the Job Analysis Information: Start by identifying the use to which the
information will be put, since this will determine the type of data you collect and the technique
you use to collect them.
2. Collection of Background Information: According to Terry, “The make-up of a job, its relation
to other jobs, and its requirements for competent performance are essential information needed for a
job evaluation. This information can be had by reviewing available background information such as
organization charts and the existing job descriptions.
3. Selection of Jobs for Analysis: Job analysis is a costly and time consuming process. Hence, it is
necessary to select a representative sample of jobs for the purposes of analysis. Priorities of various
jobs can also be determined.
4. Collection of Job Analysis Data: Job data on features of the job, required employee qualification
and requirements, should be collected either from the employees who actually perform a job; or from
other employees who watch the workers, or from the outside persons.
5. Processing the Information: Once job analysis information has been collected, the next step is to
place it in a form that will make it useful to those charged with the various personnel functions.
Several issues arise with respect to this. First, how much detail is needed? Second, can the job
analysis information be expressed in quantitative terms? These must be considered properly.
6. Preparing Job Descriptions and Job Classifications: Job information which has been collected
must be processed to prepare the job description form. It is a statement showing full details of the
activities of the job. Separate job description forms may be used for various activities in the job and
may be compiled later on. The job analysis is made with the help of these description forms. These
forms may be used as reference for the future.
7. Developing Job Specifications: Job specifications are also prepared on the basis of information
collected. It is a statement of minimum acceptable qualities of the person to be placed on the job. It
specifies the standard by which the qualities of the person are measured.
Job Description
Job description is a written record of the duties, responsibilities and requirements of a
particular job. It is concerned with the job itself and not with the work. It is a statement describing the
job in such terms as its title, location, duties, working conditions and hazards. In other words, it tells
us what is to be done and how it is to be done and why. It is a standard of function, in that it defines
the appropriate and authorised contents of a job.
A job description contains the following:
1. Job identification, which includes the job title, alternative title, department, division, plant and
code number of the job. The job title identifies and designates the job properly.
2. Job Summary serves two important purposes. First it provides a short definition which is useful
as additional identification information when a job title is not adequate. Second, it serves as a
summary to orient the reader.
3. Job duties give us a comprehensive listing or the duties together with some indication of the
frequency of occurrence or percentage of time devoted to each major duty. It is regarded as the
heart of a job.
4. Relation to other jobs: This helps us to locate the job in the organisation by indicating the job
immediately below or above it in the job hierarchy. It also gives us an idea of the vertical
relationships of work flow and procedures.
5. Supervision: Under it is given the number of persons to be supervised along with their job titles,
and the extent of supervision involved – general, intermediate or close supervision.
6. Working conditions usually give us information about the environment in which a job holder
must work.
Job Specification
The job specification states the minimum acceptable qualifications that the incumbent must
possess to perform the job successfully. Based on the information acquired through job analysis, the
job specification identifies the knowledge, skills, and abilities needed to do the job effectively.
According to Dale Yoder, “The job specification, as such a summary properly described is
thus a specialized job description, emphasizing personnel requirement and designed especially to
facilitate selection and placement.”
A Job Specification should include:
(i) Physical characteristics, which include health, strength, endurance, age, height, weight, vision,
voice, eye, hand and foot co-ordination, motor co-ordination, and colour discrimination.
(ii) Psychological and social characteristics such as emotional stability, flexibility, decision making
ability, analytical view, mental ability, pleasing manners, initiative, conversational ability etc.
(iii) Mental Characteristics such as general intelligence, memory, judgement, ability to concentrate,
foresight etc.
(iv) Personal Characteristics such as sex, education, family background, job experience, hobbies,
extracurricular activities etc.
Job Design
Job design is of comparatively recent origin. The human resource managers have realized that
the poorly designed jobs often result in boredom to the employees, increased turnover, job
dissatisfaction, low productivity and an increase in overall costs of the organization. All these
negative consequences can be avoided with the help of proper job design. According to Jon Werner
and DeSimone, “Job design is the development and alteration of the components of a job (such as the
tasks one performs, and the scope of one’s responsibilities) to improve productivity and the quality of
the employees’ work life.”
Principles of Job Design
Principles are the bases of the approach used in job design. Robertson and Smith (1985) have
suggested the following five principles of job design:
To influence skill variety, provide opportunities for people to do several tasks and combine
tasks.
To influence task identity, combine tasks and from natural work units.
To influence task significance, form natural work units and inform people of the importance of
their work.
To influence autonomy, give people responsibility for determining their own working systems.
4. Direction and Control: Job enlargement requires direction and control from external sources, say
supervisor. In fact, the job holder may require more direction and control because of enlargement of
his responsibility. Enrichment does not require external direction and control as these come from the
job holder himself. He requires only feedback from his supervisor.
Job Evaluation
Job Evaluation is a system wherein a particular job of an enterprise is compared with its other
jobs. In the present industrial era, there are different types of jobs which are performed in every
business and industrial enterprise. Comparative study of these jobs is very essential because on the
basis of such study the structure of wages for different types of jobs is prepared. The comparison of
jobs may be made on the basis of different factors such as duties, responsibilities, working conditions,
efforts, etc. In nut shell, it may be said that job evaluation is a process in which a particular job of a
business and industrial enterprise is compared with other jobs of the enterprise.
Kimball and Kimball define job evaluation as “an effort to determine the relative value of every job
in a plant to determine what the fair basic wage for such a job should be.”
According to Wendell French, ―job evaluation is a process of determining the relative worth of the
various jobs within the organisation, so that differential wages may be paid to jobs of different worth.
The relative worth of a job means relative value produced.
We may define job evaluation as a process of analysing and describing positions, grouping them and
determining their relative value of comparing the duties of different position in terms of their
different responsibilities and other requirements.
Objectives of Job Evaluation
The following are the objectives of job evaluation:
(i) To secure and maintain complete, accurate and impersonal descriptions of each distinct job or
occupation in the entire plant;
(ii) To provide a standard procedure for determining the relative worth of each job in a plant;
(iii) To determine the rate of pay for each job which is fair and equitable with relation to other jobs in
the plant, community or industry?
(iv) To ensure that like wages are paid to all qualified employees for like work;
(v) To promote a fair and accurate consideration of all employees for advancement and transfer;
(vi) To provide a factual basis for the consideration of wage rates for similar jobs in a community and
industry.
Principles of Job Evaluation
There are certain broad principles, which should be kept in mind before putting the job evaluation
programme into practice. These principles are :
(i) Rate the job and not the man. Each element should be rated on the basis of what the job itself
requires.
(ii) The elements selected for, rating purposes should be easily explainable in terms and as few in
number as will cover the necessary requisites for every job without any overlapping.
(iii) The elements should be clearly defined and properly selected.
(iv) Any job rating plan must be sold to foremen and employees. The success in selling it will
depend on a clear-cut-cut explanation and illustration of the plan.
(v) Foremen should participate in the rating of jobs in their own departments.
(vi) Maximum co-operation can be obtained from employees when they themselves have an
opportunity to discuss job ratings.
(vii) In talking to foremen and employees, any discussion of money value should be avoided. Only
point values and degrees of each element should be discussed.
(viii) Too many occupational wages should not be established. It would be unwise to adopt an
occupational wage for each total of point values.
Methods of Job Evaluation:
The following are the methods of Job Evaluations:
1. Ranking Method: The ranking method requires a committee typically composed of both
management and employee representatives of job in a simple rank order, from highest to lowest.
Rating specialists review the job analysis information and thereafter appraise each job subjectively
according to its general importance in comparison with other jobs. In other words, an overall
judgment is made of the relative worth of each job, and the job is ranked accordingly.
2. Job Grading or Job Classification Method : This method works by assigning each job a grade,
level or class that corresponds to a pay grade for instance Grade I, Grade II, Grade III and so forth.
These grades or classifications are created by identifying gradations of some common denominations,
such as job responsibility, skill, knowledge, education required, and so on. Then, for each job grade
so created standard job descriptions are determined. Thereafter, such standard description is matched
with job descriptions in the organisation. The standard description that most nearly matches the job
description determines the job‘s grading.
3. Factor-comparison Method: This method is a combination of ranking and point systems. All jobs
are compared to each other for the purpose of determining their relative importance by selecting four
or five major job elements or factors which are more or less common to all jobs. These elements are
not predetermined. These are chosen on the basis of job analysis. The few factors which are
customarily used are : (i) mental requirements (ii) skill (iii) physical requirements (iv) responsibilities
(v) working conditions, etc. A few jobs are selected as key jobs which serve as standard against
which all other jobs are compared. key job is one whose contents have been stabilised over a period
of time and whose wage rate is considered to be presently correct by the management and the union.
Recruitment
Recruitment means search of the prospective employee to suit the job requirements as represented by
job specification. It is the process of attracting people to apply for jobs in an organisation.
According to Edwin B. Flippo: “Recruitment is the process of searching for prospective employees
and stimulating them to apply for jobs in the organisation.”
Factors affecting Recruitment
The factors affecting recruitment can be classified as internal and external factors.
The internal factors are:
Wage and salary policies;
The age composition of existing working force;
Promotion and retirement policies;
Turnover rates;
The nature of operations involved the kind of personnel required;
The level and seasonality of operations in question;
Future expansion and reduction programmes;
Recruiting policy of the organisation;
Human resource planning strategy of the company;
Size of the organisation and the number of employees employed;
. Cost involved in recruiting employees, and finally;
Growth and expansion plans of the organisation.
The external factors are:
Supply and demand of specific skills in the labour market;
Company’s image perception of the job seekers about the company.
External cultural factors: Obviously, the culture may exert considerable check on
recruitment. For example, women may not be recruited in certain jobs in industry.
Economic factors: such as a tight or loose labour market, the reputation of the
enterprise in the community as a good pay master or otherwise and such allied
issues which determine the quality and quantity of manpower submitting itself for
recruitment.
Political and legal factors also exert restraints in respect of nature and hours of
work for women and children, and allied employment practices in the enterprise,
reservation of Job for SC, ST and so on.
Sources of Recruitment
The various sources of recruitment are generally classified as internal source and external
source.
(a) Internal Sources: This refers to the recruitment from within the company. The various internal
sources are promotion, transfer, past employees and internal advertisements.
(b) External Sources: External sources refers to the practice of getting suitable persons from outside.
The various external sources are advertisement, employment exchange, past employees, private
placement agencies and consultants, walks-ins, campus recruitment, trade unions, etc.
The following external sources of recruitment are commonly used by the big enterprises:
1. Direct Recruitment: An important source of recruitment is direct recruitment by placing a
notice on the notice board of the enterprise specifying the details of the jobs available. It is
also known as recruitment at factory gate.
2. Casual Callers or Unsolicited Applications: The organisations which are regarded as good
employers draw a steady stream of unsolicited applications in their offices. This serves as a
valuable source of manpower.
3. Media Advertisement: Advertisement in newspapers or trade and professional journals is
generally used when qualified and experienced personnel are not available from other
sources.
4. Employment Agencies: Employment exchanges run by the Government are regarded as a
good source of recruitment for unskilled, semi-skilled and skilled operative jobs. In some
cases, compulsory notification of vacancies to the employment exchange is required by law.
5. Management Consultants: Management consultancy firms help the organisations to recruit
technical, professional and managerial personnel they specialise middle level and top level
executive placements.
6. Educational Institutions or Campus Recruitment: Big organisations maintain a close
liaison with the universities, vocational institutes and management institutes for recruitment
to various jobs. Recruitment from educational institutional is a well - established practice of
thousand of business and other organisations.
7. Recommendation: Applicants introduced by friends and relatives may prove to be a good
source of recruitment.
8. Labour Contractors: Workers are recruited through labour contractors who are themselves
employees of the organisation. Recruitment through labour contractors has been banned for
the public sector units.
9. Telecasting: The practice of telecasting of vacant posts over T.V. is gaining importance these
days. Special programmes like ‘Job Watch', ‘Youth Pulse’, ‘ Employment News’, etc. over
the T.V have become quite popular in recruitment for various types of jobs.
10. Raiding: Raiding is a technical term used when employees working elsewhere are attracted to
join organisations. The organisations are always on the lookout for qualified professionals,
and are willing to offer them a better deal if they make the switch.
Merits of External Source of Recruitment
The merits of external sources of recruitment are as under:
1. Qualified Personnel: By using external sources of recruitment the management can make
qualified and trained people to apply for vacant Jobs in the organisation.
2. Wider choice: When vacancies are advertised widely a large number of applicants from
outside the organisation apply. The management has a wider choice while selecting the
people for employment.
3. Fresh Talent: The insiders may have limited talents. External sources facilitate infusion of
fresh blood with new ideas into the enterprise. This will improve the overall working of the
enterprise.
4. Competitive Spirit: If a company can tap external sources, the existing staff will have to
compete with the outsiders. They will work harder to show better performance.
Demerits of External Sources
The demerits of filling vacancies from external sources are as follows:
1. Dissatisfaction among Existing Staff: External recruitment may lead to dissatisfaction and
frustration among existing employees. They may feel that their chances of promotion are reduced.
2. Lengthy Process: Recruitment from outside takes a long time. The business has to notify the
vacancies and wait for applications to initiate the selection process.
3. Costly Process: It is very costly to recruit staff from external sources. A lot of money has to
be spent on advertisement and processing of applications.
4. Uncertain Response: The candidates from outside may not be suitable for the enterprise.
There is no guarantee that the enterprise will be able to attract right kinds of people from external
sources.
Selection
Human resource selection is the process of preferring qualified individuals who are available to
fill positions in an organization. Selection involves both picks up the fits and rejects the unfits.
Therefore, sometimes, it is called a negative process.
According to Thomas Stone, “Selection is the process of differentiating between applicants in order
to identify (and hire) those with a greater likelihood of success in a job”.
Difference between Recruitment and Selection
1. Difference in Objective: The basic objective of recruitment is to attract maximum number of
candidates so that more options are available. The basic objective of selection is to choose best out of
the available candidates.
2. Difference is Process: Recruitment adopts the process of creating application pool as large as
possible and therefore. It is known as positive process. Selection adopts the process through which
more and more candidates are rejected and fewer candidates are selected or sometimes even not a
single candidate is selected. Therefore, it is known as negative process or rejection process.
3. Technical Differences: Recruitment techniques are not very intensive, and not require high skills.
As against this, in selection process, highly specialised techniques are required. Therefore, in the
selection process, only personnel with specific skills like expertise in using selection tests, conducting
interviews, etc., are involved.
4. Difference in Outcomes: The outcome of recruitment is application pool which becomes input for
selection process. The outcome of selection process is in the form of finalising candidates who will be
offered jobs.
Selection Procedure
1. Application Pool: Application pool built-up through recruitment process is the base for
selection process. The basic objective at the recruitment level is to attract as much worthwhile
applications as possible so that there are more options available at the selection stage.
2. Preliminary Screening and Interview: It is highly noneconomic to administer and handle all
the applicants. It is advantageous to sort out unsuitable applicants before using the further
selection steps. For this purpose, usually, preliminary interviews, application blank lists and
short test can be used. All applications received are scrutinised by the personnel department in
order to eliminate those applicants who do not fulfil required qualifications or work
experience or technical skill, his application will not be entertained. Such candidate will be
informed of his rejection.
(a) Biographical Data: Name, father’s name, data and place of birth, age, sex, nationality,
height, weight, identification marks, physical disability, if any, marital status, and number of
dependants.
(b) Educational Attainment: Education (subjects offered and grades secured), training
acquired in special fields and knowledge gained from professional/technical institutes or through
correspondence courses.
(c) Work Experience: Previous experience, the number of jobs held with the same or
other employers, including the nature of duties, and responsibilities and the duration of various
assignments, salary received, grades, and reasons for leaving the present employer.
(e) Other Items: Names and addresses of previous employers, references etc. An application
blank is a brief history sheet of an employee’s background and can be used for future reference, in
case needed.
4. Selection Tests: Many organisations hold different kinds of selection tests to know more about
the candidates or to reject the candidates who cannot be called for interview etc. Selection tests
normally supplement the information provided in the application forms. Such forms may contain
factual information about candidates.
A. Aptitude Tests: These measure whether an individual has the capacity or talent
ability to learn a given job if given adequate training. These are more useful for clerical and trade
positions.
C. Interest Tests: These determine the applicant’s interests. The applicant is asked
whether he likes, dislikes, or is indifferent to many examples of school subjects, occupations,
amusements, peculiarities of people, and particular activities.
D. Performance Tests: In this test the applicant is asked to demonstrate his ability
to do the job. For example, prospective typists are asked to type several pages with speed and
accuracy.
E. Intelligence Tests: This aim at testing the mental capacity of a person with
respect to reasoning, word fluency, numbers, memory, comprehension, picture arrangement, etc. It
measures the ability to grasp, understand and to make judgement.
F. Knowledge Tests: These are devised to measure the depth of the knowledge and
proficiency in certain skills already achieved by the applicants such as engineering, accounting etc.
H. Projective Tests: In these tests the applicant projects his personality into free
responses about pictures shown to him which are ambiguous.
5. Interview: An interview is a procedure designed to get information from a person and to assess his
potential for the job he is being considered on the basis of oral responses by the applicant to oral
inquiries by the interviewer. Interviewer does a formal in-depth conversation with the applicant, to
evaluate his suitability. It is one of the most important tools in the selection process. This tool is used
when interviewing skilled, technical, professional and even managerial employees. It involves two-
way exchange of information. The interviewer learns about the applicant and the candidate learns
about the employer.
Principles of Interviewing
To make it effective, an interview should be properly planned and conducted on ertain principles;
Edwin B. Flippo has described certain rules and principles of good interviewing to this end:
Provide proper surroundings. The physical setting for the interview should be both private and
comfortable.
The mental setting should be one of rapport. The interviewer must be aware of non-verbal
behaviour.
Plan for the interview by thoroughly reviewing job specifications and job descriptions.
Inform yourself as much as possible concerning the known information about the interviewee.
The interviewer should possess and demonstrate a basic liking and respect for people.
Make a decision only when all the data and information are available. Avoid decisions that are
based on first impressions.
Conclude the interview tactfully, making sure that the candidate leaves feeling neither too elated
nor frustrated.
Maintain some written record of the interview during or immediately after it.
Questions must be stated clearly to avoid confusion and ambiguity. Maintain a balance between
open and overtly structured questions.
The interviewer should make some overt sign to indicate the end of the interview.
6. Background Investigation: The next step in the selection process is to undertake an investigation
of those applicants who appear to offer potential as employees. This may include contacting former
employers to confirm the candidate’s work record and to obtain their appraisal of his or her
performance/ contacting other job-related and personal references, and verifying the educational
accomplishments shown on the application.
7. Physical Examination: After the selection decision and before the job offer is made, the
candidate is required to undergo physical fitness test. Candidates are sent for physical examination
either to the company’s physician or to a medical officer approved for the purpose. Such physical
examination provides the following information:
Whether the candidate’s physical measurements are in accordance with job requirements or
not?
Whether the candidate suffers from bad health which should be corrected?
Whether the candidate has health problems or psychological attitudes likely to interfere
with work efficiency or future attendance?
Whether the candidate is physically fit for the specific job or not?
8. Approval by Appropriate Authority: On the basis of the above steps, suitable candidates are
recommended for selection by the selection committee or personnel department. Though such a
committee or personnel department may have authority to select the candidates finally, often it has
staff authority to recommend the candidates for selection to the appropriate authority.
9. Final Employment Decision: After a candidate is finally selected, the human resource department
recommends his name for employment. The management or board of the company offers
employment in the form of an appointment letter mentioning the post, the rank, the salary grade, the
date by which the candidate should join and other terms and conditions of employment. Some firms
make a contract of service on judicial paper. Usually an appointment is made on probation in the
beginning. The probation period may range from three months to two years. When the work and
conduct of the employee is found satisfactory, he may be confirmed.
10. Evaluation: The selection process, if properly performed, will ensure availability of competent
and committed personnel. A period audit, conducted by people who work independently of the
human resource department, will evaluate the effectiveness of the selection process. The auditors will
do a thorough and the intensive analysis and evaluate the employment programme.
Orientation (Induction)
The introduction of the new employee to the job is known as induction. It is the process by which
new employees are introduced to the practices, policies and purposes of the organisation. Induction
follows placement and consists of the task of orienting or introducing the new employee to the
company, its policy and its position in the economy. Induction literally means helping the worker to
get or with his own environment. After an employee is assigned his job, it is necessary to introduce
him to his job situation, his associates in the job and the overall policies of the company.
In other words, it is a welcoming process-the idea is to welcome a newcomer, make him feel at home
and generate in him a feeling that his job, even though small, is meaningful and has significant
importance as part of the total organisation.
In the words of John M. Ivancevich, “Orientation orients, directs, and guides employees to
understand the work, firm, colleagues, and mission. It introduces new employees to the organisation,
and to his new tasks, managers, and work groups.”
Orientation is one component of the new employee socialization process. It is a process through
which a new employee is introduced to the organisation. The new employee is handed over a
rulebook, company booklets, policy manuals, progress reports and documents containing company
information which are informational in nature. It is responsibility of the human resource department
to execute the orientation programme.
Objectives of Induction
4) Make the new employee feel ‘at home’ in the new environment
10) Establish a favourable attitude about the company in the minds of the employee.
Induction Process
There is no specific model of induction process. Each industry develops its own procedure as per its
requirements. Generally, an induction procedure involves the following basic steps:
1. Reporting for duty before the concerned head of the department at a certain place.
3. Introduction to the organizational head / branch head by the head of the department.
6. Providing information about the duties, responsibilities, rights, facilities, welfare measures, etc.
7. Supervisor clarifies the doubts of the new employee about the work.
experienced person to have the solution of the particular problem new employee might has. At the
very beginning new employees are having lots of questions as same as kids at small ages. That is full
normal thing and common thing, because the new employee needs to get know all the things, he may
actually needs or not. CEO, GM, Section/Department Heads, Senior Managers, and Line Managers
may involve in to the formal induction programme. This will deliver fundamental things that new
employees need to know. Advantage of the formal induction program is organization will have the
better chance to win the new employees’ loyalty at the very beginning. And also new employee will
have the chance to carry his/her works clearly, with less numbers of errors. Also, new employee will
fit to the organizational culture and the work group easily, and strongly.
2. Informal Induction Programme: Informal induction is not planned and is ad hock. New
employees learn through trial and error method. They get familiar with the work and work
environment by themselves. This induction type will make the stress on new employee at the very
beginning, because of his/her not knowing things at the operations. So in that case, new employee
may leave the organization at the beginning and then the organization may need to follow all the
process of recruiting and new employee to the organization. Also this method will create a large
number of errors making by new employee and then it may creates big losses to the organization.
Those are the disadvantages of informal induction program. The advantage of informal induction is,
if the new employee survived, then he/she may know the process by his/her experience, and the later
on errors may minimize. But at the beginning the vice verse thing of above advantage may creates
loses, if the new employee unable to survive at the organization. At the movements which employees
couldn’t survive, there could be see they are leaving organization at the beginning they have joined to
it. So this will creates high labour turn over too.
Placement
According to Pigors and Myers, “Placement consists in matching what the supervisor has
reason to think the new employee can do with what the job demands (job requirements), imposes (in
strain, working conditions, etc.), and offers (in the form of pay rate, interest, companionship with
other, promotional possibilities, etc.)” They further state that it is not easy to match all these factors
for a new worker who is still in many ways an unknown quantity. For this reason, the first placement
usually carries with it the status of probationer.
A few basic principles should be followed at the time of placement of an employee on the job.
These may be enumerated as below:
The job should be offered to the man according to his qualifications. The placement should neither
be higher nor lower than the qualifications.
While introducing the job to the new employee, an effort should be made to develop a sense of
loyalty and cooperation in him so that he may realise his responsibilities better towards the job and
the organisation.
The employee should be made conversant with the working conditions prevailing in the industry
and all things relating to the job. He should also be made aware of the penalties if he commits a
wrong.
Man should be placed on the job according to the requirements of the job. The job should not be
adjusted according to the qualifications or requirements of the man. Job first; man next, should be
the principle of placement.
The placement should be ready before the joining date of the newly selected person.
The placement in the initial period may be temporary as changes are likely after the completion
of training. The employee may be later transferred to the job where he can do better justice.
Significance of placement
MODULE - III
TRAINING OF EMPLOYEES
Introduction
Training is an organised activity for increasing the knowledge and skills of people for a definite
purpose. It involves systematic procedures for transferring technical know-how to the employees so
as to increase their knowledge and skills for doing specific jobs with proficiency. In other words, the
trainees acquire technical knowledge, skills and problem solving ability by undergoing the training
programme. According to Edwin B. Flippo, “Training is the act of increasing the knowledge and
skills of an employee for doing a particular job”.
Objectives of Training
(i) To impart to new entrants the basic knowledge and skill they need for an intelligent performance
of definite tasks;
(ii) To assist employees to function more effectively in their present positions by exposing them
to the latest concepts, information and techniques and developing the skills, they will need in their
particular fields;
(iii) To build up a second line of competent officers and prepare them to occupy more responsible
positions;
(iv) To broaden the minds of senior managers by providing them with opportunities for an inter-
change of experiences within and outside with a view to correcting the narrowness of the outlook that
may arise from over-specialisation;
(v) To impart customer education for the purpose of meeting the training needs of Corporations
which deal mainly with the public. In a nutshell, the objectives of training are ―to Bridge the gap
between existing performance ability and desired performance.
Need and Importance of Training
1. Increasing Productivity: Instruction can help employees increase their level of performance
on their present job assignment. Increased human performance often directly leads to increased
operational productivity and increased company profit.
2. Improving Quality: Better informed workers are less likely to make operational mistakes.
Quality increases may be in relationship to a company product or service, or in reference to the
intangible organisational employment atmosphere.
3. Helping a Company Fulfil its Future Personnel Needs: Organisations that have a good
internal educational programme will have to make less drastic manpower changes and
adjustments in the event of sudden personnel alternations. When the need arises, organisational
vacancies can more easily be staffed from internal sources if a company initiates and maintains
and adequate instructional programme for both its non-supervisory and managerial employees.
4. Improving Organisational Climate: An endless chain of positive reactions results from a
well-planned training programme. Production and product quality may improve; financial incentives
may then be increased, internal promotions become stressed, less supervisory pressures ensue and
base pay rate increases result.
5. Improving Health and Safety: Proper training can help prevent industrial accidents. A safer
work environment leads, to more stable mental attitudes on the part of employees.
6. Obsolescence Prevention: Training and development programmes foster the initiative and
creativity of employees and help to prevent manpower obsolescence, which may be due to age,
temperament or motivation, or the inability of a person to adapt himself to technological changes.
7. Personal Growth: Employees on a personal basis gain individually from their exposure to
educational experiences. Again, Management development programmes seem to give participants a
wider awareness, an enlarged skin, an enlightened altruistic philosophy, and make enhanced
personal growth possible.
Distinction between Training and Development
Training Development
1. Training means learning skills and knowledge Development means the gorwth of an
for doing a particular job. It increases job employee in all respects. It shapes
skills. attitudes.
2. The term ‘training’ is generally used to The term ‘development’ is associated
denote imparting specific skills among with the overall growth of the executives.
operative workers and employees.
3. Training is concerned with maintaining and Executive development seeks to develop
improving current job performance. Thus, it competence and skills for future
has a short-term perspective. performance. Thus, it has a long-term
perspective.
4. Training is job-centred in nature. Development is career-centred in nature.
5. The role of trainer or supervisor is very All development is ‘self development’.
important in training. The executive has to be internally
motivated for self-development
Methods of training
The following methods are generally used to provide training :
On-the-Job Training Methods:
This type of training is imparted on the job and at the work place where the employee is
expected to perform his duties.
1. On Specific Job: On the job training methods is used to provide training for a specific
job such as electrical, motor mechanic, pluming etc.
(a) Experience : This is the oldest method of on-the-job training. Learning by experience
cannot and should not be eliminated as a method of development, though as a sole
approach; it is a wasteful, time consuming and inefficient.
conditions they are talking about. In this way, they more or less experiment on themselves.
Laboratory training is more concerned about changing individual behaviour and attitude. There are
two methods of laboratory training: simulation and sensitivity training.
(a) Simulation: An increasing popular technique of management development is simulation of
performance. In this method, instead of taking participants into the field, the field can be simulated in
the training session itself Simulation is the presentation of real situation of organisation in the training
session. There are two common simulation methods of training. They are role-playing and business
game.
(i) Role-playing: Role-playing is a laboratory method, which can be used rather easily as a
supplement of conventional training methods. Its purpose is to increase the trainee‘s skill in dealing
with other people. One of its greatest uses, in connection with human relations training, but it
is also used in sales training as well. It is spontaneous acting of a realistic situation involving two or
more persons, under classroom situations. Dialogue spontaneously grows out of the situation, as the
trainees assigned to it develop it.
(ii) Gaming: Gaming has been devised to simulate the problems of running a company or
even a particular department. It has been used for a variety of training objectives from investment
strategy, collective bargaining techniques to the morale of clerical personnel. It has been used at all
the levels, from the executives for the production supervisors. Gaming is a laboratory method in
which role-playing exists but its difference is that it focuses attention on administrative problems,
while role-playing tend to emphasis mostly feeling and tone between people in interaction.
(b) Sensitivity Training: Sensitivity training is the most controversial laboratory training
method. Many of its advocates have an almost religious zeal in their enhancement with the
training group experience. Some of its critics match this favour in their attacks on the technique.
As a result of criticism and experience, a revised approach, often described as “team
development” training has appeared.
Induction Training
The introduction of the new employee to the job is known as induction. It is the process by
which new employees are introduced to the practices, policies and purposes of the organisation.
Induction follows placement and consists of the task of orienting or introducing the new employee to
the company, its policy and its position in the economy. Induction literally means helping the worker
to get or with his own environment. After an employee is assigned his job, it is necessary to introduce
him to his job situation, his associates in the job and the overall policies of the company.
An induction process properly designed should serve the following purposes:
(a) to help the newcomer to overcome his natural shyness, any nervousness he may experience
in meeting new people in the new environment;
(b) to integrate the new employee into the organisation and develop a sense of belonging
which is a strong motivational force;
(c) to supply information about the nature for workforce, conditions of service and welfare
facilities.
MODULE IV
PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL AND CAREER PLANNING
Introduction
Performance appraisal or Performance evaluation is a method of evaluating the behaviour of
employees in a work place, normally including both the quantitative and qualitative aspect of job
performance. Performance here refers to the degree of accomplishment of the tasks that makeup an
individual’s job. It indicates how well an individual fulfilling the job demands. Performance is
measured in terms of results. Thus, Performance appraisal is the process of assessing the performance
or progress of an employee, or a group of employees on th given job, as well as his potential for
future development. Thus, performance appraisal comprises all formal procedures used in
organisations to evaluate contributions, personality, and potential of individual employees.
According to Edwin Flippo, “Performance appraisal is the systematic, periodic and an
impartial rating of an employee‘s excellence in matters pertaining to his present job and his potential
for a better job.”
According to Cummings, “The overall objective of performance appraisal is to improve the
efficiency of an enterprise by attempting to mobilise the best possible efforts from individuals
employed in it. Such appraisals achieve four objectives including the salary reviews the development
and training of individuals, planning job rotation and assistance promotions.”
Characteristics of Performance Appraisal
1. A Process: Performance appraisal is not a one-act play. It is rather a process that involves
several acts or steps.
2. Systematic Assessment: Performance appraisal is a systematic assessment of an
employee‘s strengths and weakness in the context of the given job.
3. Main Objective: The main objective of it is to know how well an employee is going for the
organisation and what needs to be improved in him.
4. Scientific Evaluation: It is an objective, unbiased and scientific evaluation through similar
measure and procedures for all employees in a formal manner.
5. Periodic Evaluation : Although informal appraisals tend to take place in an unscheduled
manner (on continuous) basis with the enterprises a supervisors evaluate their subordinates work and
as subordinates appraise each other rand supervisors on a daily basis.
6. Continuous Process: In addition to being periodic performance usually is an ongoing
process.
Purposes of Performance Appraisal
The following are the main purposes of performance appraisal:
1. Appraisal Procedure: It provides a common and unified measure of performance
appraisal, so that all employees are evaluated in the same manner. It gives an in discriminatory rating
of all the employees.
2. Decision Making: Performance appraisal of the employees is extremely useful in the
decision making process of the organization. In selection, training, promotion, pay increment and in
transfer, performance appraisal is very useful tool.
problems which are faced by the performance appraiser, new areas of research may be developed in
personnel field.
6. Help in Self Evaluation: Performance appraisal helps the employee in another way also.
Every employee is anxious to know his performance on the job and his potentials for higher jobs so
as to bring himself to the level of that position.
Essentials of an Effective Performance Appraisal System
1. Mutual Trust: The existence of an atmosphere of confidence and trust so that both supervisor and
employee may discuss matters frankly and offer suggestions which may be beneficial for the
organisation and for an improvement of the employee. An atmosphere of mutual trust and confidence
should be created in the organisation before introducing the appraisal system.
2. Clear Objectives: The objectives and uses of performance appraisal should be made clear and
specific. The objectives should be relevant, timely and open.
3. Standardisation: Well-defined performance factors and criteria should be developed. These
factors as well as appraisal form, procedures and techniques should be standardised. It will help to
ensure uniformity and comparison of ratings.
4. Training : Evaluators should be given training in philosophy and techniques of appraisal. They
should be provided with knowledge and skills in documenting appraisals, conducting post appraisal
interviews, rating errors, etc.
5. Job Relatedness: The evaluators should focus attention on job-related behaviour and performance
of employees. The results of performance rather than personality traits should be given due weight.
6. Strength and Weaknesses: The raters should be required to justify their ratings. The supervisor
should try to analyse the strength and weaknesses of an employee and advise him on correcting die
weakness.
7. Individual Differences: While designing the appraisal system, individual differences in
organisations should be recognised. Organisations differ in terms of size, nature, needs and
environment. Therefore, the appraisal system should be tailor-made for the particular organisation.
8. Feedback and Participation : Arrangements should be made to communicate the ratings to both
the employees and the raters. The employees should actively participate in managing performance
and in the ongoing process of evaluation. The superior should play the role of coach and counseller.
9. Post Appraisal Interview: A post-appraisal interview should be arranged so that employees may
be supplied with feedback and the organisation may know the difficulties under which employees
work, so that their training needs may be discovered.
10. Review and Appeal : A mechanism for review of ratings should be provided. Which particular
technique is to be adopted for appraisal should be governed by such factors as the size, financial
resources, philosophy‘and objectives of an organisation.
Process of Performance Appraisal
Various steps in appraising performance of employees are as follows:
1. Establishing Performance Standard: The process of evaluation begins with the establishment of
Performance Standards. While designing a job and formulating a job description, performance
standards are usually developed for the position. This standard should be very clear and objective
enough to be understood and measured.
compared with the person in the scale, and certain scores for each factor are awarded to
him/her. In other words, instead of comparing a whole man to a whole man personnel are
compared to the key man in respect of one factor at a time. We can use this method in job
evaluation. This method is also known as the Factor Comparison Method.
5. Graphic Rating Scale Method: This is the very popular, traditional method of performance
appraisal. Under this method, scales are established for a number of fairly specific factors. A
printed form is supplied to the rater. The form contains a number of factors to be rated.
Employee characteristics and contributions include qualities like quality of work,
dependability, creative ability and so on. These traits are then evaluated on a continuous scale,
where the rater places a mark somewhere along the scale. The scores are tabulated and a
comparison of scores among the different individuals is made. These scores indicate the work
of every individual.
6. Check-list Method: The main reason for using this method is to reduce the burden of
evaluator. In this method of evaluation the evaluator is provided with the appraisal report
which consist of series of questions which is related to the appraise. Such questions are
prepared in a manner that reflects the behavior of the concerned appraise.
7. Critical Incidents Method: This method is very useful for finding out those employees who
have the highest potential to work in a critical situation. Such an incidence is very important
for organization as they get a sense, how a supervisor has handled a situation in the case of
sudden trouble in an organization, which gives an idea about his leadership qualities and
handling of situation. It is also said to be a continuous appraisal method where employees
are appraised continuously by keeping in mind the critical situation. In this method, only the
case of sudden trouble and behaviour associated with these incidents or trouble are taken for
evaluation.
8. Essay Method: In this method, the rater writes a detailed description on an employee’s
characteristics and behavior, Knowledge about organizational policies, procedures and rules,
Knowledge about the job Training and development needs of the employee, strengths,
weakness, past performance, potential and suggestions for improvement. It is said to be the
encouraging and simple method to use. It does not need difficult formats and specific training
to complete it.
Modern Methods:
1. Management by Objective (MBO)
It was Peter F. Drucker who first gave the concept of MBO to the world in 1954 when his book The
Practice of Management was first published. Management by objective can be described as, a process
whereby the superior and subordinate managers of an organisation jointly identify its common goals,
define each individual‘s major areas of responsibility in terms of results expected of him and use
these measures as guides for operating the unit and assessing the contribution of each of its members.
Essential Characteristics of MBO:
1. A Philosophy: Management by objective is a philosophy or a system, and not merely a technique.
2. Participative Goal Setting: It emphasises participative goal setting.
3. Clearly Define Individual Responsibilities: Management by objective (MBO) clearly defines
each individual‘s responsibilities in terms of results.
4. Accomplishment of Goal: It focuses a tension on what goal must be accomplished rather than on
how it is to be accomplished (method).
5. Objective Need into Personal Goal: MBO converts objective need into personal goals at every
level in the organisation.
The Process of MBO:
1. Establishment of Goal: The first step is to establish the goals of each subordinate. In some
organisations, superiors and subordinates work together to establish goals. While in other
organisation, superiors establish goals for subordinates. The goals typically refer to the desired
outcome to be achieved. Thereafter these goals can be used to evaluate employee performance.
2. Setting the Performance Standard: The second step involves setting the performance standard
for the subordinates in a previously arranged time period. As subordinates perform, they know fairly
well what there is to do, what has been done, and what remains to be done.
3. Comparison of Actual Goals with the Standard Goals : In the third step the actual level goal
attainment is compared with the standard goals. The evaluator explores reasons of the goals that were
not met and for the goals that were exceeded. This step helps to determine possible training needs.
4. Establishing New Goals, New Strategies: The final step involves establishing new goals and,
possibly, new strategies for goals not previously attained. At this point, subordinate and superior
involvement in goal-setting may change. Subordinates who successfully reach the established goals
may be allowed to participate more in the goal-setting process next time.
Advantages of MBO:
1. Balanced Focus on Objectives: MBO forces the management to set objectives with balanced
stress on key result area. Thus, crisis conditions are avoided to take place in the organisation.
2. Better Managing Things: MBO forces managers to think about planning for results, rather than
merely planning activates or work. Managers are required to ensure that the targets are realistic and
needed resources are made available to subordinates to achieve the targets.
3. Better Organising : The positions in the enterprise can be built around the key result areas.
Managers are required to clarify organisational roles and structures hence better organising.
4. MBO Reduces Role Conflict and Ambiguity : Role conflict exists when a person is faced with
conflicting demands from two or more supervisors; and role ambiguity exits when a person is
uncertain as to how he will be evaluated, or what he has to achieve. Since MBO aims at providing
clear targets and their order or priority, it reduces both these situations.
5. It Provide more Objective Appraisal Criteria : The targets emerge from the MBO process
provide a sound set of criteria for evaluating the manager‘s performance.
6. More Motivation : MBO helps and increases employee motivation because it relates overall goals
to the individual‘s goals : and help to increase an employee’s understanding or where the organisation
is and where it is heading.
7. Managers Complete with Themselves : Managers are more likely to complete with themselves
than with other managers. The kind of evaluation can reduce internal conflicts that often arise when
managers compete with each other to obtain scarce resources.
8. Develop Personal Leadership : MBO helps the individual manager to develop personal
leadership, especially the skills of listening, planning, controlling, motivating, counselling and
evaluating. This approach to managing instills a personal commitment to respond positively to the
organisation‘s major concerns as well as to the development of human resources.
9. MBO Identifies Problem Early : It identifies problems better and early. Frequent performance
review sessions makes this possible.
10. Identifies Performance Deficiency : MBO identifies performance deficiencies and enables the
management and the employee to set individualised self improvement goals and thus proves effective
in training and development of people.
Disadvantages of MBO:
1. Unfavourable Attitude of Managers : Some executives have an attitude that the regular attention
required of them by Management by objectives system, drawn heavily on their busy time-schedule
and is not consistent with their roles. They feel that it is not so effective a way as some other
approaches.
2. Difficult to Apply MBO Concepts : Those executives who have been involved very often find it
difficult to apply MBO concepts to their own work habits. They find it hard to think about the results
of work rather than the work itself.
3. Heavy Paper Work : MBO involves a huge amount of news letter, instruction booklets, training
manuals, questionnaires, performance data review and appraisals report to be prepared by the superior
and subordinates. Thus MBO is said to have created one more paper mill in organisation added to the
already existing large amount of paper work.
4. Tug of War : There is sometimes tug of war in which the subordinates try to set the lowest targets
possible and the supervisors the highest.
5. Time Consuming : MBO is time consuming especially in the early phases of its introduction when
employees are unfamiliar with its process.
2. Assessment Centres:
It is a method which was first implemented in German Army in 1930. With the passage of time
industrial houses and business started using this method. This is a system of assessment where
individual employee is assessed by many experts by using different technique of performance
appraisal. The techniques which may be used are role playing, case studies, simulation exercises,
transactional analysis etc.
In this method employees from different departments are brought together for an assignment which
they are supposed to perform in a group, as if they are working for a higher post or promoted. Each
employee is ranked by the observer on the basis of merit .The basic purpose behind assessment is to
recognize whether a particular employee can be promoted, or is there any need for training or
development. This
method has certain advantages such as it helps the observer in making correct decision in terms of
which employee has the capability of getting promoted, but it has certain disadvantages also it is
costly and time consuming, discourages the poor performers etc.
3. 360 Degree Performance Appraisals:
This method is also known as ‘multi-rater feedback’, it is the appraisal in a wider perspective where
the comment about the employees’ performance comes from all the possible sources that are directly
or indirectly related with the employee on his job. In 360 degree performance appraisal an employee
can be appraised by his peers, managers (i.e. superior), subordinates, team members, customers,
suppliers/ vendors - anyone who comes into direct or indirect contact with the employee and can
provide necessary information or feedback regarding performance of the employee the “on-the-job”.
The four major component of 360 degree performance appraisal are:
1. Employees Self Appraisal
2. Appraisal by Superior
3. Appraisal by Subordinate
4. Peer Appraisal.
Employee self appraisal gives an option to the employee to know his own strengths and
weaknesses, his achievements, and judge his own performance. Appraisal by superior forms the
traditional part of the 360 degree performance appraisal where the employees’ responsibilities and
actual performance is judged by
the superior. Appraisal by subordinate gives a chance to evaluate the employee on the basis of
communication and motivating abilities, superior’s ability to delegate the work, leadership qualities
etc. It is also known as internal customers; the correct opinion given by peers can aid to find
employees’ who are co-operative, employees who ready to work in a team and understanding towards
others.
4. Cost Accounting Method:
In this method performance of an employee is evaluated on the basis of monetary returns the
employee gives to his or her organization. A relationship is recognized between the cost included in
keeping the employee in an organization and the benefit the organization gets from him or her. The
evaluation is based on the established relationship between the cost and the benefit. The following
factors are considered while evaluating an employee’s performance:
1. Interpersonal relationship with others.
2. Quality of product produced or service given to the organization.
3. Wastage, damage, accidents caused by the employee.
4. Average value of production or service by an employee.
5. Overhead cost incurred.
5. Behaviorally Anchored Rating Scales (BARS):
This method is a combination of traditional rating scales and critical incidents methods. It consists of
preset critical areas of job performance or sets of behavioural statements which describes the
important job performance qualities as good or bad (for e.g. the qualities like inter personal
relationships, flexibility and consistency, job knowledge etc). These statements are developed from
critical incidents. These behavioral examples are then again translated into appropriate performance
dimensions. Those that are selected into the dimension are retained. The final groups of behavior
incidents are then scaled numerically to a level of performance that is perceived to represent. A rater
must indicate which behavior on each scale best describes an employee’s performance. The results of
the above processes are behavioural descriptions, such as anticipate, plan, executes, solves immediate
problems, carries out orders, and handles urgent situation situations. This method has following
advantages: a) It reduces rating errors) Behavior is assessed over traits. c) It gives an idea about the
behavior to the employee and the rater about which behaviors bring good Performance and which
bring bad performance.
15. Unconfirmed: Sometimes the results of performance appraisals are not confirmed by other
techniques of motivation, incentive wages plans and so on. Factors are introduced in the managerial
appraisal because of a fact or bias in the person concerned conducting the appraisal.
Career Planning
Career Planning is the systematic process by which one selects career goals and the path to
these goals. From the organization’s viewpoint, it means helping the employees to plan their career in
terms of their capacities within the context of organization’s needs. It involves designing an
organizational system of career movement and growth opportunities for employees from the
employment stage to the retirement stage. Individuals who can fill planned future positions are
identified and prepared to take up these positions. Career planning is the process of matching career
goals and individual capabilities with opportunities for their fulfilment.
Objectives of Career Planning
Career Planning seeks to achieve the following aims:
1. To attract and retain the right type of persons in the organization.
2. To map out careers of employees suitable to their ability, and their willingness to be trained
and developed for higher positions.
3. To ensure better use of human resources through more satisfied and productive employees.
4. To have a more stable workforce by reducing labour turnover and absenteeism.
5. To improve employee morale and motivation by matching skills to job requirements and by
providing opportunities for promotion.
6. To provide guidance and encourage employees to fulfil their potentials.
7. To achieve higher productivity and organizational development.
Career Development Process
Career development and the career planning process include a number of specific steps that
help to identify personal skills and attributes. Following are the important steps in the process of
career development:
Step 1: Self-Assessment
Evaluating who you are as a person. This involves taking a personal inventory of who you are
and identifying your individual values, interests, skills, and personal qualities. What makes you tick
as a person? You will look at those personal attributes under a microscope and come up with key
qualities you can identify and use in your search for the perfect career. Career assessments may be
required to promote a better understanding of personal attributes and skills. Contact your Career
Services Office at your college to discuss if a career assessment may be right for you.
Step 2: Research (Career Exploration)
Obtain an insider’s perspective about the career field you are considering. Conduct
Informational Interviews in person, phone, or by email. Professionals enjoy sharing their expertise
with people interested in the field. Perform informational interviews with alumni from your college to
gain their perspective of the field and to listen to what they have to say. This strategy provides
firsthand knowledge from someone currently working in the field and gives you an opportunity to ask
about their experiences as well as potential jobs and what one might expect if just entering the field.
Gain experience through internships or by job shadowing for one to several days to see what a typical
work day entails and to gain perspective of what the environment is like and the typical job
responsibilities of someone working in the field. Research what types of jobs are available in your
area of interest by checking out Majors to Career Converter, The Occupational Outlook Handbook
and The Career Guide to Industries. The Occupational Outlook Handbook offers a wealth of
information for those currently just entering the job market and for those anticipating making a career
change.
Step 3: Decision-Making
Once you’ve made a thorough self-assessment and have done some research of career options,
it’s time to make a decision. This can be difficult since there may still be many unknowns and a fear
of making the wrong choice. One thing for sure is that although we can do all the necessary steps to
making an informed decision, there is no absolute certainty that we are unquestioningly making the
right decision. This uncertainty is easier for some people than others but a key point to remember is
that you can always learn from any job you have and take those skills and apply them at your next
job.
Step4: Search (Taking Action)
It’s now time to look for prospective jobs and/or employers, send out cover letters and
resumes, and begin networking with people in the field. Keep in mind that cover letters and resumes
are designed to make a favourable impression on employers (if done properly) and the interview
process is what will ultimately land you the job. In other words, make sure your cover letter and
resume highlight your skills and strengths based on the employer’s needs and that you are fully
prepared to knock their socks off at the interview. Take time to research the employer’s website prior
to the interview, and be prepared to ask thoughtful questions based on your research.
Step5: Acceptance
You have completed all of the steps above and you’ve been accepted into a new and exciting
or different job. According to the Bureau of Labour Statistics, 64.1% of people change jobs between
5 and 14 times in their lifetime. Consequently, learning the skills above will increase your chances of
gaining meaningful and satisfactory work as well as help you to avoid many of the stresses that occur
with changing jobs. By recognizing that change is good (even advantageous), changing jobs can be
viewed as a positive experience and need not be as anxiety provoking as it may initially seem. You
will continue the process of self-assessment, research, decision-making, and job searching in order to
make effective and fulfilling career changes throughout your lifetime. It is a known fact that most
professionals leave an organization due to lack of career growth. Active career development
initiatives by a company are a key retention tool to keep the best talent within its fold. It is one of the
greatest motivators to keep an employee happy and engaged. But does career planning and
development of employees actually make a difference to the productivity of a worker? Most
organizations think so, and consider it a part of their critical human resource strategy. From the
employees’ point of view career development initiatives gives them a clear focus about their career
track, the blind spots that they have to overcome and the final goal to be reached. This focused
approach works to their advantage from their everyday work to long-term aspirations. The impact of
career development/ succession planning programmes can be seen through the productivity indicator,
engagement surveys and reduction in attrition rate. It is in fact a win-win situation for all.
MODULE: V
a) To Employees:
i. Employees are paid according to requirement of their jobs i.e highly skilled jobs are paid more
compensation than low skilled jobs. This eliminates inequalities.
ii. The chances of favouritism are minimised.
iii. Jobs sequence and lines of promotion are established wherever they are applicable.
iv. Employee’s moral and motivation are increased because of the sound compensation structure.
b) To Employers:
i. They can systematically plan for and control the turnover in the organization.
ii. A sound compensation structure reduces the likelihood of friction and grievance over
remunerations.
iii. It enhance an employee morale and motivation because adequate and fairly administrative
incentives are basis to his wants and need.
iv. It attracts qualified employees by ensuring and adequate payment for all the jobs.
v. In dealing with a trade union, they can explain the basis of their wages programme because it is
based upon a systematic analysis of jobs and wages facts.
Principles of Wages and Salary Administration
Since the issue of wage and salary determination has always enjoying the major consideration
for any organization, it should be develop and maintain based on sound principles , some of them are
narrated below, attempt should be made to incorporate them as far as possible while designing the
compensation system.
1) There should be a definite plan and system to ensure that differences in pay for jobs are based upon
variations in job requirements, means maintaining equity in the distribution of wages and salaries in
the organization.
2) Maintaining competitiveness in the wage market means the general level of wage and salary
should be reasonably in line with that prevailing in the market.
3) Matching employees’ expectations and it should avoid unjustified discrimination by providing
equal pay for equal work.
4) Reinforcing positive employee behavior and contribution to the organization, differences in the
compensation package should be based on contribution, productivity, job performance, achievement
etc.
5) Devising a system that is the most efficient for the organization, as far as possible it must eliminate
any discrepancies or exploitation of the employees.
6) The compensation system should formulate and define rules and regulations for determining,
changing, adjusting wages in the organization.
7) The compensation package must ensure fairness, should maintain harmonious relationship between
the employee and employer.
8) Compensation system should be flexible enough so that future changes can be incorporated.
9) The wage and salary administration should take care of and comply all the rules and regulations
laid down by the legislator for protecting the employees’ interest.
10) Optimization of management and employee interests.
Essentials of Sound Wage and Salary Administration
Sound Wage and salary administration demands some essentials to satisfy, so that one who is
shoulder with the responsibility of designing administrative aspects with this regards, may come out
with efficient system for managing the issues related with it. Some of the pre requisites for the sound
compensation system are:
I. Rational Job Analysis: It is an important exercise with regards to each category of jobs. It reveals
detailed aspects of the job, like duties, responsibilities associated with the performance, performance
standards as a fair parameter for evaluation of the performance. It gives fair idea about job
specification i.e. qualification, experience, skill and other essential requirements that job performer
must satisfy. Thus rational job analysis always put policy decider in a better condition to lay down
appropriate content in policy design.
II. Proper Job Evaluation: Job evaluation is a systematic process of analyzing and evaluating jobs
to determine the relative worth of job in an organization. It forms the basis for designing the sound
compensation system in an organization. Since wage and salary administration and the perceived
fairness of approach adopted under it have a immense influence on employee morale, motivation and
satisfaction, proper job evaluation exercise demands sensible consideration.
III. In Depth Knowledge About an Organization and Market Factors: Apart from job evaluation,
the various other factors that determine the administrative aspects for wage and salary administration
are the size and structure of the organization and the industry in which it operates, the strength of
employees union, position of a person and his importance to the organization, demand and supply for
particular skill sets in the industry, organizational ability and capacity to pay and its economic
condition like profitability, and legislative aspects related with wage determination. Sound system for
compensation management demands detail knowledge about all these factors in order to its sound
framework and operation in the organization.
IV. Clarity of Objectives or Purposes of Wage and Salary Administration : Last but not the least
in terms of its significance, in order to have effective and efficient administration of compensation as
an area in the organization, one must have accurate clarity about the purposes that it may tries to
satisfy through policy decisions .objectives may be attracting talented resources; retaining and
motivating employees; financial management of an organization; satisfying legal requirement; and
many more. Sometimes these objectives are conflicting in nature also. So it is very essential that one,
who is going to carry out this responsibility of designing the compensation system in the
organization, should have reasonable clarity for objectives to be satisfied with the design.
Human Resource Management 60
School of Distance Education
is not acceptable to many trade unions as it is very difficult to have accurate measurement and is has
always remain at a discretion of management policies.
5) Cost of Living: It is always expected that there has to be adjustment in pay rates in accordance
with prevailing cost of living. The changes in the cost of leaving affect purchasing power of the
person. Trade union also considers this as a base for collective bargaining on wage issues.
6) Trade Union’s Bargaining Power: Generally the mechanism for fixing of wages for majority of
workers is collective bargaining or negotiation, and collective bargaining and negotiations depends
upon the trade union’s strength. If there is a strong union operates in the organization, it may dictate
its terms on wage fixation and revision over a period of time and vice versa. The strength and power
of the trade union depends upon its membership, financial strength and leadership it may have, for its
functioning.
7) Job Requirements: From the organizational perspective appropriate job analysis and job
evaluation exercise is a base for the wage determination and revision. It is quite obvious also that
wages to be paid to the workers should be in accordance with the duties, responsibilities and the
efforts likely to be put for job performance. Wage or compensation package very in accordance with
job description and job specification.
8) Management Attitude: Attitude of employer or management towers the working community of
the organization does influence in wage determination and revision at an appropriate time. Some
reputed and professional organization does prefer to pay wage in accordance with their reputation or
prestige of an organization in the market. They may give participation to workers in sharing profits.
On the other hand conservative organizations do not prefer to go for such profit sharing.
9) Psychological and Social Factors: Psychologically person perceive wages and compensation
package as sole parameter for success or failure in the life. Compensation package plays significant
role in the employees pride, moral, motivation and psychological engagement and involvement in the
work. Therefore such variable should not be overlooked by the organization while determining
wage and salary structure. Socially and ethically also people feels that “equal work should carry equal
pay “ i.e. wage should be in accordance with efforts and workers should not be felt like being
cheated. Compensation policy should not make any discrimination on the basis of caste, color, Sex or
region, and must try to satisfy condition for fairness equity and justice.
10) Legislative Considerations: Legislative provisions do provide protection to the working
community by fixing bottom line for wage payments. Many a time it was found that the bargaining
power of the workers was not strong enough to ensure fair wages. Consequently, the state legislative
frame work stepped in to regulate wages and provide for certain benefits to the workers. Legislation
like Minimum Wages Act, 1936, provides for statutory minimum wages to be prevails in the
industrial organization so that workers can satisfy their bare requirements and maintain their
minimum living standard. These aspects are also considered while deciding compensation policy for
an organization.
Time rate system is unrelated to the productivity and does not provide extra motivation for extra
efforts by the workers.
The labor charges for a particular job do not remain constant. This put the management in a
difficult position in the matter of quoting rates for a particular piece of work.
There is a possibility of systematic evasion of work by the workers, since there is no specific target
or demand for specific quantity of work by the management.
Time rate system does not ask for maintaining individual workers record, it becomes difficult for
the employer to determine his relative efficiency for the purpose of performance evaluation for future
promotion or rewards. Thus it does injustice to the outstanding employees.
Suitability:
Time rate system is suitable when the output contributed by the worker is difficult to measure and
cannot be recorded in an individual basis. It is also suitable when by cultivating mutual trust and
confidence and by giving fair and equal treatment to all the employees, management can get the work
done in an appropriate manner.
II. Piece Rate Wage System:
Under this system, workers are paid according to the amount of work done or numbers of units
produced or completed, the rate of each unit being settled in advance, irrespective of the time taken to
do the work. This does not mean that the workers can take any time to complete a job because of his
performance far exceeds the time which his employer expects he would take, the overhead charges
for each unit of article will increase. There is an indirect implication that a worker should not take
more than average time.
Merits:
The main advantage of this system is recognition of merit, as efficient is rewarded, It is therefore
more equitable then time rate system.
It pays workers as per their efficiencies, ability, capacity or performance, so it gives direct stimulus
and motivation to the employees for extra efforts, which may result into more productivity.
It requires less managerial supervision as total remuneration depends upon units produced, and not
on time spent in an organization.
Being interested in continuity of his work, a workman is likely to take greater care to prevent
breakdown in the machinery or in the work shop. It is a gain to the management since it reduces
maintenance expenditure in an organization.
As the direct labor cost per unit of production remains fixed and constant, calculation of cost while
filling tenders and estimates becomes easier.
It results in to not only increase in the output and wages ,but the methods of production too are also
improved, as workers demand material and tools free from defects and machinery in perfect operating
condition.
Demerits:
If rates of wages are not scientifically fixed and acceptable to the workers, would result into
workers exploitation and may prove counterproductive.
As workers are interested in completion of the job with a greatest speed, may damage the
machinery, quality of output or may increase rate of hazards in an organization.
Trade unions generally do not like this system of wage payment; they may not have full support
and acceptance. It may be the major issue for industrial dispute.
Suitability:
It can be introduced generally in jobs of a repetitive nature, when task can be easily measured,
inspected and counted. It is practically suitable for standardized processes, and it appeals to skilled
and efficient workers who can increase their earnings by working to their best capacity.
III. Balance and Debt System:
This system combines time rate and piece rate. Under it a minimum weekly wage is guaranteed for a
full weeks’ work, with an alternative piece-rate determined by the rate fixed on the assumption that
the worker would put enough effort to earn his minimum wage. If the wages calculated on piece
bases are in excess of the time rate, the worker earns the excess. If the piece rate wages are less than
the time-rate earnings, he would still get weekly wage, but on the condition that he shall have to make
good the excess paid to him out of the subsequent wage he would earn. Suppose a worker is expected
to complete at least 10 pieces during the week in order to earn the minimum wage of rs.60, the piece
rate has been fixed at a rate of Rs.6 per unit. If the worker produces 12 units within the week, his
earning will be Rs.72. If on the other hand he produces only 9 units , he will still be paid Rs. 60 his
minimum weekly wage but as on the basis of piece rate his earning should amount to only Rs. 54, the
sum of Rs. 6 paid in excess will be debited to him to be deducted out of his subsequent earnings.
Thus under this system workers’ wages are determined, by both the number of hours he works and
the pieces he produces. So it a hybrid system producing the same benefits and limitations of both the
time rate and piece rare system.
Various Modes of Compensation
Various modes of compensation are as follows:
a) Wages and Salary- Wages represent hourly rates of pay and salary refers to monthly rate of pay
irrespective of the number of hours worked. They are subject to annual increments. They differ from
employee to employee and depend upon the nature of jobs, seniority and merit.
b) Incentives- These are also known as payment by results. These are paid in addition to wages and
salaries. Incentive depends upon productivity, sales, profit or cost reduction efforts. Incentive scheme
are of two types:
Individual incentive schemes.
Group incentive schemes.
c) Fringe Benefits- These are given to employees in the form of benefits such as provident fund,
gratuity, medical care, hospitalization, accident relief, health insurance, canteen, uniform etc.
d) Non- Monetary Benefits- They include challenging job responsibilities, recognition of merit,
growth prospects, competent supervision, comfortable working condition, job sharing and flexi time.
Incentives
Incentives are monetary benefits paid to workmen in lieu of their outstanding performance.
Incentives vary from individual to individual and from period to period for the same individual. They
are universal and are paid in every sector. It works as motivational force to work for their
performance as incentive forms the part total remuneration. Incentives when added to salary increase
the earning thus increase the standard of living. The advantage of incentive payment are reduced
supervision, better utilisation of equipment, reduced scrap, reduced lost time, reduced absenteeism
and turnover & increased output.
According to Burack & Smith, “An incentive scheme is a plan or programmes to motivate
individual or group on performance. An incentive programme is most frequently built on monitory
rewards (incentive pay or monetary bonus), but may also include a variety of non monetary rewards
or prizes.”
Kinds of Incentives
Incentives can be classified under the following categories:
1. Individual and Organizational Incentives
2. Financial and Non-Financial Incentives
3. Positive and Negative Incentives
1) Individual and Organizational Incentives- According to L.G. Magginson, “Individual incentives
are the extra compensation paid to an individual for all production over a specified magnitude which
stems from his exercise of more than normal skill, effort or concentration when accomplished in a
predetermined way involving standard tools, facilities and materials.”
individual performance is measured to calculate incentive where as organizational or group
incentive involve cooperation among employees, management and union and purport to accomplish
broader objectives such as an organization-wide reduction in labour, material and supply costs,
strengthening of employee loyalty to company, harmonious management and decreased turnover and
absenteeism.
I) Individual Incentive System is of two types:
a) Time based System- It includes Halsey Plan, Rowan Plan, Emerson Plan and Bedeaux Plan
b) Production based System- it includes Taylor’s Differential Piece Rate System, Gantt’s Task and
Bonus Plan
Gantt’s Task and Bonus Plan - In this, a minimum wage is guaranteed. Minimum wage is given to
anybody, who completes the job in standard time. If the job is completed in less time, then there is a
hike in wage-rate. This hike varies between 25% to 50% of the standard rate.
Profit Sharing – It is a method of remuneration under which an employer pay his employees a share
in form of percentage from the net profits of an enterprise, in addition to regular ages at fixed
intervals of time.
2) Financial and Non-financial Incentives- Individual or group performance can be measured in
financial terms. It means that their performance is rewarded in money or cash as it has a great impact
on motivation as a symbol of accomplishment. These incentives form visible and tangible rewards
provided in recognition of accomplishment. Financial incentives include salary, premium, reward,
dividend, income on investment etc. On the other hand, non-financial incentives are that social and
psychological attraction which encourages people to do the work efficiently and effectively. Non-
financial incentive can be delegation of responsibility, lack of fear, worker’s participation, title or
promotion, constructive attitude, security of service, good leadership etc..
3) Positive and Negative Incentives- Positive incentives are those agreeable factors related to work
situation which prompt an individual to attain or excel the standards or objectives set for him, where
as negative incentives are those disagreeable factors in a work situation which an individual wants to
avoid and strives to accomplish the standards required on his or her part. Positive incentive may
include expected promotion, worker’s preference, competition with fellow workers and own‘s record
etc. Negative incentives include fear of lay off, discharge, reduction of salary, disapproval by
employer etc.
Fringe Benefits
Employees are paid several benefits in addition to wages, salary, allowances and bonus. These
benefits and services are called ‘fringe benefits’ because these are offered by the employer as a
fringe. Employees of the organization are provided several benefits and services by the employer to
maintain and promote employee’s favorable attitude towards the work and work environment. It not
only increases their morale but also motivate them. These provided benefits and services forms the
part of salary and are generally refereed as fringe benefits. According to D. Belcher, “ Fringe benefits
are any wage cost not directly connected with the employees productive effort, performance, service
or sacrifice”.
Kinds of Fringe Benefits
The various organizations in India offer fringe benefits that may be categorized as follows:
1) Old Age and Retirement Benefits - these include provident fund schemes, pension schemes,
gratuity and medical benefits which are provided to employee after their retirement and during old
age as a sense of security about their old age.
2) Workman’s Compensation - these benefits are provided to employee if they are got ignored or
die under the working conditions and the sole responsibility is of the employer.
3) Employee Security- Regular wage and salary is given to employee that gives a feeling of security.
Other than this compensation is also given if there is lay-off or retrenchment in an organization.
4) Payment for Time Not Worked – Under this category of benefits, a worker is provided payment
for the work that has been performed by him during holidays and also for the work done during odd
shifts. Compensatory holidays for the same number in the same month are given if the worker has not
availed weekly holidays.
5) Safety and Health – Under this benefit workers are provided conditions and requirements
regarding working condition with a view to provide safe working environment. Safety and Health
measures are also taken care of in order to protect the employees against unhealthy working
conditions and accidents.
6) Health Benefits – Employees are also provided medical services like hospital facility, clinical
facility by the organization.
Process of Wage Determination
Practically how wages are determined and maintained or administered in an organization is
very organization to organization. Ideally speaking it depends upon sole discretion that what
procedure an organization follows for wage and salary administration. More or less an attempt is
made by every organization to follow the principles suggested for sound compensation management.
Organization tries to inculcate systematic procedure for wage determination and their revision at an
appropriate time. Process of wage determination includes job analysis and job evaluation, survey of
wages in the environment, determining wage structure, and deciding rules for wage administration.
Following are the important steps:
1. Job Analysis and Job Evaluation: This may be the primary exercise that an organization needs to
carefully carry out with an intention to create base for wage determination. Job analysis reveals
information about tasks, duties, responsibilities and standards with proposed job is to be performed
by the employees. It also guides in terms of job specification i.e. skills, ability. Qualification and
experiences needed to perform the job with requisite performance standards. Job analysis gives
enough information about the job and the profile of the performer in order to perform that job.
Another important exercise that an organization needs to carry out is ‘Job Evaluation’. It is nothing
but finding out relative worth of a job, in terms its contribution and significance to the overall
organizational objectives.
2. Determining Performance Standard and Wage Surveys: Having understood the job in
considerable detail an attempt is made to determine expected performance standard to be carried out
by the performer. Then, an organization must survey wage rates prevails in the market for the same
job or its similar type, so that attractive compensation package can be designed to induce good quality
of candidature to apply for the job in an organization. Here care should be taken that wage structure
should be in accordance with the complexity and efforts needed in the performance.
3.Deciding Wage Structure and Rules for Its Administration: Based on collection of relevant
information and taking in to account some of the influencing factors, an organization should design
wage structure which includes slab for basic or minimum wages, incentives, and/or increment over a
period of time to gather with other financial and nonfinancial perquisites to be offered to an
employee. Attempt should be made to follow principles of fairness, equity and justice to gather with
transparency while designing wage structure and deciding rules for its administration. The rules
should not provoke un justified discriminations and exploitation of workers otherwise it may prove
counterproductive and may give rise to grievance, and industrial disputes.
Management of Complaints and grievances
There is hardly an industrial concern which functions smoothly for all the times. In some
companies, the employees have complaints against their employers, while in others, against other
employees. These may be real or imaginary, valid or invalid, genuine or false. Broadly speaking, a
complaint affecting one or more workers constitutes a grievance.It may relate to quantum of wages,
the mode of payment, payment of over time work, leave, working conditions, promotions, seniority,
transfers, work assignments, dismissal or discharge, etc.
Complaint is an employee’s formal expression or dissatisfaction with various aspects of
employment such as working conditions, hours of work, relationship with supervisor and other
employees, considered by the employee to be inappropriate, harmful or unfair.
A grievance is an employee’s formal expression of disagreement or dissatisfaction with the
adverse personnel action involving alleged discrimination under the law, a decrease in salary,
demotion and suspension without pay and/or discharge.
Meaning and Definition of Grievance
A grievance is a sign of employee’s discontent with job and its nature. The employee has got
certain aspirations and expectations which he thinks must be fulfilled by the organisation where he is
working. When the organisation fails to satisfy the employee needs, he develops a feeling of
discontent or dissatisfaction. Thus, grievance is caused due to the difference between the employee
expectation and management practices.
Keith Davis defines it as “any real or imagined feeling of personal injustice which an employee has
concerning his employment relationship”.
The International Labour Organisation defines grievance as “a complaint of one or more workers in
respect of wages, allowances, conditions of work, and interpretation of service stipulations, covering
such areas as overtime, leave, transfer, promotion, seniority, work assignment and termination of
services”.
On analysis of these various definitions, it may be noted that:
1. A Grievance may be unvoiced or expressly stated by an employee.
2. It may be written or verbal
3. It may be valid and legitimate, untrue or completely false, or ridiculous; and
Positive Discipline – Now a days the management of various organizations have adopted
positive progressive outlook for disciplining the employees. With the ever increasing awareness
among the workers concerning their rights and responsibility, it was required on the part of
management to reconsider the negative approach of fear used by them so far.
Thus management emphasized on the concept of self – discipline. This approach of self
control asserts on cooperative efforts of employees to abide by the rules of the organization. Thus
positive aspect of discipline plays a much greater role in safeguarding industrial peace and prosperity.
Main Characteristics of Discipline
The following are the main characteristics of Discipline can be summed up as follows:-
(i) To guarantee successful fulfilment of organizational goals it motivates workers to abide by the
instructions issued by the management or superiors.
(ii) It is a negative approach in the sense that it discourages employees in under taking some
activities while encouraging undertaking the few others.
(iii) On Violation or disobedience of organization rules it imposes fine or reprimand, therefore, it
is also called as punitive or big stick approach.
Aims & Objectives of Discipline
The aims and objectives of discipline are as follows:-
(i) For the achievement of organizational goals it tries to earn the willing approval of employees.
(ii) To introduce the component of uniformity and assurance despite the numerous organization.
(iii) For improving the quality of production by enhancing the morale and working efficiency of the
employees.
(iv) To generate respect for human relations in the organization.
(v) To confer and seek direction and responsibility.
Importance of Discipline in Industry
Discipline acts as a cornerstone for the smooth functioning of any enterprise. Absence of
discipline in any industry can create a great amount of commotion and confusion thereby decreasing
its productivity. For any enterprise however big or small manpower is the most pivotal resource and
thereby all efforts should be made to discipline them. All steps should be taken to encourage mutual
trust and confidence between the workers and the management which is indispensable to bring about
needed discipline at the workplace. Maintenance of discipline is a precondition for attaining the aims
and purposes of the organization swiftly.
Indiscipline
organization. Indiscipline may prove to have detrimental effects on the morale and motivation of the
employees as well as on the organization as a whole.
Factors Responsible for Indiscipline
There are various socio-economic and cultural factors that play a role in creating indiscipline in an
organization. The important among them are:
1. Unfair labour practices
2. Wage differentials
3. Wrong work assignments
4. Defective grievance procedure
5. Payment of very low wages
6. Poor communication
7. Victimisation by management
8. Ineffective leadership.
Misconduct
An action or type of behaviour can be defined as misconduct if it is prejudicial to the interests
of the employer and other employees, inconsistent with the norms set for discharging duties, unsafe
or unfaithful to such a degree that it becomes incompatible to continue employer – employee
relationships.
Categories of Misconduct
Disciplinary acts of misconduct can be categorized on the basis of the severity of the consequences.
(i) Minor Contravention– results in few serious consequences. Example – negligence, minor
disobedience to rules, carelessness.
(ii) Major Contravention – Partially hinders the working of the organization. Example – lying,
cheating, stealing
(iii) Intolerable Offences – are of unlawful and severe nature which endanger employment
relationship.
Example – threat to use weapon, use of drugs on the job, smoking near inflammables.
Misconduct Stated In Model Standing Orders
Here is an illustrative list of acts constituting misconduct under Model Standing Orders Act ,
1946.
(i) Wilful insubordination or disobedience of any lawful and reasonable order , rule or regulation.
(ii) Refusal to work on a job or a machine which has been assigned to him.
(iii) Refusal to accept or reply to a charge sheet within the prescribed period of time.
(iv) Theft , fraud , or dishonesty in connection with the property of the company.
(v) Theft of another employee’s property inside the industrial area or company premises.
(vi) Causing willful damage to , or loss of , the employer’s goods or property.
(vii) Causing damage to a product in process or to any property.
(viii) Interference with , safety devices.
(ix) Non-observance of safety precautions and rules.
(x) Taking or giving a bribe or any illegal gratification.
(xii) Acceptance of gifts from subordinates.
(xiii) Habitual late coming.
(xiv) Absence from duty without leave.
(xv) Overstay when on leave without prior authorized permission.
(xvi) Entering or leaving , or attempting to enter or leave , the work premises except through
authorized entrance and exits.
Causes & Approaches Towards Disciplinary Action
Causes for Infringement of Discipline
The main reasons for breach of discipline in any organization may be stated under following
heads
(I) Causes Related To the Worker
(a) Illiteracy and low intellectual level of workers.
(b)Workers personal problems like their fears, hope, aspirations etc.
(c) Inborn tendencies of workers to flout rules.
(II) Causes Related To the Socio – Cultural Factors -
(a)Misunderstanding and rivalry among workers.
(b)Discrimination based on caste, colour, sex, place in imposing penalties.
(III) Causes Related To the Work Environment –
(a)Bad working conditions.
(b)Defective supervision
(c)Non-placement of right person on the right job.
(e) Prompt Action – care should be taken to make sure that the penalty is imposed soon after the
violation of a rule has occurred.
(f) Search for the Facts – before proceeding to take any action against an employee , provide him
with sufficient time to present his side of the case i.e. What and why it Happened ….?
(g) Natural Justice – the punishment or penalty imposed on the indisciplined worker must satisfy the
principle of natural justice. The punishment should always justify with the gravity of the offence.
Mc Gregor’s Hot Stove Rule
The model method for enforcement of discipline should have the four important Characteristics of a
red– hot – stove.
(i) Advance Warning – a red – hot stove tells us, “don’t touch me, you will suffer” Similarly a
worker knows what is expected of him and what will be the result if he fails to live up to those
expectations.
(ii) Immediate Effect - if one overlooks the advance warning and touches the stove, gets immediate
result (fingers may suffer burns) likewise workers may get instantaneous effect on committing any
act of indiscipline.
(iii) Consistency – every time we touch a red – hot stove we get the same result. Every time a worker
commits the insufficient act , he should be penalized.
(iv) Impersonal Approach – red – hot stove functions uniformly for all, doing away with any
favouritism. In the same way, management should not discriminate in imposing punishment on basis
of caste, creed, colour, sex etc. It should guarantee the fundamental right to equality. Thus these four
characteristics should be kept in mind before administrating any disciplinary action.
Procedure for Disciplinary Action
The following steps should be taken care of while administrating a disciplinary action:
(a) Ascertaining the Statement of the Problem - First look into the violation of rule and the number
of employees involved in the matter. Then ascertain the gravity of the violation and the conditions
under which it occurred.
(b) Searching for the Underlying Facts – This calls for thorough examination of the case together
the relevant facts.
(c) Deciding upon the Type of Penalty – The penalty or punishment should be such which
discourages future reoccurrence of the offence or violation. But it should always relate to the gravity
of the offence.
(d) Application of Penalty – The selected penalty may be imposed on the wrong doers and if the
offence is not of a serious nature then it may be disposed off quickly.
(e) Follow-up on Disciplinary Action – Vigilant supervision of the person against whom a
disciplinary action is taken should be done.