Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Resource Management
Eighth Edition
Chapter 5
Human Resource Planning and Job Analysis
Introduction
Human resource planning
is a process by which an
organization ensures that
it has the right number and
kinds of people
at the right place
at the right time
capable of effectively and
efficiently completing those
tasks that will help the
organization achieve its overall
strategic objectives.
Introduction
Linked to the organizations
overall strategy and planning to
compete domestically and
globally.
Overall plans and objectives must
be translated into the number and
types of workers needed.
Senior HRM staff need to lead top
management in planning for HRM
issues.
An Organizational Framework
A mission statement defines what
business the organization is in,
including why it exists and who its
customers are.
Strategic goals
Set by senior management to establish
targets for the organization to achieve.
Generally defined for the next 5-20 years.
Linking Employers Strategy to
Plans
Figure 52
An Organizational Framework
Corporate assessment
Gap or SWOT (Strengths-Weaknesses-
Opportunities-Threats) analysis determines
what is needed to meet objectives.
Strengths and weaknesses and core
competencies are identified.
HRM determines what knowledge, skills
and abilities are needed by the
organizations human resources.
An Organizational Framework
Linking Organizational Strategy to
Human Resource Planning
Ensures that people are available
to meet the requirements set
during strategic planning.
Assessing current human
resources
A human resources inventory report
summarizes information on current
workers and their skills.
Linking Organizational Strategy to
Human Resource Planning
Human Resource Information
Systems (HRIS) are
increasingly popular
computerized databases that
contain important information
about employees.
Using Computers to Forecast
Personnel Requirements
Computerized forecasts
The use software packages to determine of future staff needs by
projecting sales, volume of production, and personnel required to
maintain a volume of output.
Generates figures on average staff levels required to meet
product demands, as well as forecasts for direct labor, indirect
staff, and exempt staff.
Typical metrics: direct labor hours required to produce one
unit of product (a measure of productivity), and three sales
projectionsminimum, maximum, and probable.
Forecasting the Supply of
Inside Candidates
Qualifications inventories
Manual or computerized records listing
employees education, career and development
interests, languages, special skills, and so on, to
be used in selecting inside candidates for
promotion.
Forecasting Personnel Needs
Trend analysis
The study of a firms past employment needs
over a period of years to predict future needs.
Ratio analysis
A forecasting technique for determining future
staff needs by using ratios between a causal
factor and the number of employees needed.
Assumes that the relationship between the
causal factor and staffing needs is constant
The Scatter Plot
Scatter plot
A graphical method used to help identify the
relationship between two variables.
Size of Hospital Number of
(Number of Beds) Registered Nurses
200 240
300 260
400 470
500 500
600 620
700 660
800 820
900 860
Determining the Relationship
Between
Hospital Size and Number of
Nurses
Figure 53
Drawbacks to Scatter Plots
1. They focus on projections and historical relationships, and assume
that the firms existing structure and activities will continue into the
future.
2. They generally do not consider the impact the companys strategic
initiatives may have on future staffing levels.
3. They tend to support compensation plans that reward managers for
managing ever-larger staffs, and will not uncover managers who
expand their staffs irrespective of strategic needs.
4. They tend to bake in the nonproductive idea that increases in staffs
are inevitable.
5. They tend to validate and institutionalize existing planning processes
and ways of doing things, even in the face of rapid change.
Linking Organizational Strategy to
Human Resource Planning
Assessing current human resources
Succession planning
includes the development of replacement
charts
portray middle-to-upper level management
positions that may become vacant in the near
future
lists information about individuals who might
qualify to fill the positions
Manual Systems and
Replacement Charts
Personnel replacement charts
Company records showing present performance
and promotability of inside candidates for the
most important positions.
Position replacement card
A card prepared for each position in a company
to show possible replacement candidates and
their qualifications.
Management
Replacement Chart
Showing Development
Needs of Future
Divisional Vice
President
Figure 54
The Matter of Privacy of HR
Information
The need to ensure the security of HR
information
There is a lot of HR information to keep secure.
Control of HR information can be established
through the use of access matrices that limit
users.
Legal considerations: The Federal Privacy Act
of 1974 gives employees rights regarding who
has access to information about their work
history and job performance.
Forecasting the Supply of Outside
Candidates
Figure 47a
Source: Courtesy of HR
Department, Pearson
Education.
Figure 47b
Job Analysis
Job Specifications
States minimum acceptable qualifications.
Used to select employees who have the
essential qualifications.
Job Analysis
Job Evaluations
Specify relative value of each job in the
organization.
Used to design equitable compensation
program.
Job Analysis
The Multi-faceted Nature of Job
Analysis
Almost all HRM activities are tied to job
analysis.
Job analysis is the starting point for sound
HRM.
Job Analysis
Job Analysis and the Changing World of
Work
Globalization, quality initiatives,
telecommuting, and teams require
adjustments to the components of a job.
Todays jobs often require not only
technical skills but interpersonal skills and
communication skills as well.