Performance Appraisal:                                
Performance appraisal is done to evaluate the performance of the employees and also helps in the understanding the abilities of a person for the further growth of the employees.
Performance appraisal is done in systematic ways using following steps:


  • Supervisor measures the pay of the employees with the targets and plans for betterment of the pay scale.
  • Supervisor measures the key terms that are responsible for the performance of the employees.
  • Employers also guide the employees regarding their performance that helps them in growth of their career.

Objectives of Performance Appraisal:
·      To maintain records of every employee in order to decide their compensation packages.
·      To identify the strengths and weakness of the employee to place the correct person in correct job.
·      To maintain, present and improve the potential of a person which leads to their career growth.
·      To evaluate the performance of the individual employees periodically.
·      It is a basis to influence the work habits of an employee.
·      It helps to review or retain the promotional and training programs to the employees.

Advantages of Performance Appraisal:
Performance appraisal is believed to be an investment for the company and the advantages are:
·      Promotions: Performance Appraisal helps to evaluate the performance of the employees and conduct promotional programs or training programs for the employees who are on average performance.
Employees who are not able to improve even after training can be demoted or dismissed from the services.
·      Compensation: Performance appraisal helps in deciding the compensation packages of the employees and rating depends on merit ranking of their performance. Compensation packages includes salaries, bonus, allowances, extra benefits, the compensation should depend on merits of performance rather than seniority.

Employees Development:
·      Performance appraisal helps to frame training programs. It helps to analyze the strengths and weakness of the employees so that new jobs and designations can be designed for the promotion of employees.

·      Selection method:
As per the performance appraisal results one can determine and improve the selection methods of the employees. Improvements that helps for the betterment of selection procedure are made with the help of performance appraisal.

·      Communication:
Communication is important between the employee and employer in an Organization.
It helps the employers to accept the skills and weakness of the employees.
It creates trust to the employees on the employers.
It boosts the spirit of work and morale of the employees to perform better than the present.

The above factors help in effective communication in the organization.

·      Motivation:
Whenever an employee is evaluated on his performance using performance appraisals and given the worth compensation benefits like bonus, incentives etc. that is the greatest motivation to the employees to perform better than the present.

Performance appraisal Tools and Techniques: 


1.    Ranking
2.    Paired Comparison
3.    Forced Distribution
4.    Confidential Report
5.    Essay Evaluation
6.    Critical Incident
7.    Checklists
8.    Graphic Rating Scale
9.    BARS
10. Forced Choice Method
11. MBO
12. Field Review Technique
13. Performance Test
Ranking:
·      Ranking is rating an employee against his competitor on overall performance. Comparison of one employee against another is done under same work group to know the better performance. The position of an employee is done in terms of numerical rank.
Ranking is done according to their performance levels.
It is easier to rank the best performance employee and worst performance employee.    

Limitations of Ranking Method:
·      The “whole man” is compared with another “whole man” in this method. In practice, it is very difficult to compare individuals possessing various individual traits.
·      This method speaks only of the position where an employee stands in his group. It does not test anything about how much better or how much worse an employee is when compared to another employee.
·      When a large number of employees are working, ranking of individuals become a difficult issue.
·      There is no systematic procedure for ranking individuals in the organization. The ranking system does not eliminate the possibility of snap judgements.
Forced Distribution method

·      This is a ranking technique where raters are required to allocate a certain percentage of rates to certain categories like average, below average, excellent or percentiles (e.g.: top 10 percent, bottom 20 percent etc.). Both the number of categories and percentage of employees to be allotted to each category are a function of performance appraisal design and format. The workers of outstanding merit may be placed at top 10 percent of the scale, the rest may be placed as 20 % good, 40 % outstanding, 20 % fair and 10 % fair.

Advantages:

·      This method avoids partiality of the raters and the judgement will be impartial
·      By these predetermined rating method different opinions from different uses can be avoided.

Limitations of Forced Distribution

·      The limitation of using this method in salary administration, however, is that it may lead low morale, low productivity and high absenteeism. 
·      Employees who feel that they are productive, but find themselves in lower grade (than expected) feel frustrated and exhibit over a period of time reluctance to work.
Critical Incident techniques
Under this method, the manager prepares lists of statements of very effective and ineffective behavior of an employee. These critical incidents or events represent the outstanding or poor behavior of employees or the job. The manager maintains logs of each employee, whereby he periodically records critical incidents of the worker’s behavior. At the end of the rating period, these recorded critical incidents are used in the evaluation of the worker’s performance.
Example of a good critical incident of a Customer Relations Officer is: March 12 - The Officer patiently attended to a customer’s complaint. He was very polite and prompt in attending the customer’s problem.
Advantages of Critical Incident techniques
·      This method provides an objective basis for conducting a thorough discussion of an employee’s performance.
·      This method avoids bias (most recent incidents are too much emphasized)
Limitations of Critical Incident techniques
·      Negative incidents may be more noticeable than positive incidents.
·      The supervisors have a tendency to unload a series of complaints about the incidents during an annual performance review sessions.
·      It results in very close supervision which may not be liked by an employee.
·      The recording of incidents may be a chore for the manager concerned, who may be too busy or may forget to do it.

Checklists and Weighted Checklists
 In this system, a large  number of statements that describe a specific job are given. Each statement has a weight or scale value attached to it. While rating an employee the supervisor checks all those statements that most closely describe the behavior of the individual under assessment.

·       The rating sheet is then scored by averaging the weights of all the statements checked by the rater. A checklist is constructed for each job by having persons who are quite familiar with the jobs. These statements are then categorized by the judges and weights are assigned to the statements in accordance with the value attached by the judges.

Advantages of Checklists and Weighted Checklists
·      Most frequently used method in evaluation of the employee’s performance.

Limitations of Checklists and Weighted Checklists
·      This method is very expensive and time consuming
·      Rater may be biased in distinguishing the positive and negative questions.
·      It becomes difficult for the manager to assemble, analyze and weigh a number of statements about the employee’s characteristics, contributions and behaviors.

Performance Appraisal Bias:

Managers commit mistakes in evaluating the employees and their performances, which mite spoil the performance appraisal and demotivate the employees.

1.    First Impression (primacy effect):
 Raters form an overall impression about the ratee on the basis of some particular characteristics of the ratee identified by them. The identified qualities and features may not provide adequate base for appraisal.

2.    Halo Effect: 
The individual’s performance is completely appraised on the basis of a perceived positive quality, feature or trait. In other words, this is the tendency to rate a man uniformly high or low in other traits if he is extra-ordinarily high or low in one particular trait. If a worker has few absences, his supervisor might give him a high rating in all other areas of work.

3.    Horn Effect: 
The individual’s performance is completely appraised on the basis of a negative quality or feature perceived. This results in an overall lower rating than may be warranted. “He is not formally dressed up in the office. He may be casual at work too!”.

4.    Excessive Stiffness or Lenience: 
Depending upon the raters own standards, values and physical and mental makeup at the time of appraisal, ratees may be rated very strictly or leniently. Some of the managers are likely to take the line of least resistance and rate people high, whereas others, by nature, believe in the tyranny of exact assessment, considering more particularly the drawbacks of the individual and thus making the assessment excessively severe. The leniency error can render a system ineffective. If everyone is to be rated high, the system has not done anything to differentiate among the employees.

5.    Central Tendency: 
Appraisers rate all employees as average performers. That is, it is an attitude to rate people as neither high nor low and follow the middle path. For example, a professor, with a view to play it safe, might give a class grade near the equal to B, regardless of the differences in individual performances.

6.    Personal Biases: 
The way a supervisor feels about each of the individuals working under him - whether he likes or dislikes them - as a tremendous effect on the rating of their performances. Personal Bias can stem from various sources as a result of information obtained from colleagues, considerations of faith and thinking, social and family background and so on.

7.    Spillover Effect: 
The present performance is evaluated much on the basis of past performance. “The person who was a good performer in distant past is assured to be okay at present also”.

8.    Recency Effect: 
Rating is influenced by the most recent behavior ignoring the commonly demonstrated behaviors during the entire appraisal period.

Therefore, while appraising performances, all the above biases should be avoided.

Handling Employees After Performance Appraisals

Job evaluation is a process of determining the relative worth of a job. It is a process which is helpful even for framing compensation plans by the personnel manager. Job evaluation as a process is advantageous to a company in many ways:

Reduction in inequalities in salary structure

It is found that people and their motivation is dependent upon how well they are being paid. Therefore, the main objective of job evaluation is to have external and internal consistency in salary structure so that inequalities in salaries are reduced.

1.    Specialization – 
Because of division of labor and thereby specialization, a large number of enterprises have got hundred jobs and many employees to perform them. Therefore, an attempt should be made to define a job and thereby fix salaries for it. This is possible only through job evaluation.

2.    Helps in selection of employees – 
The job evaluation information can be helpful at the time of selection of candidates. The factors that are determined for job evaluation can be taken into account while selecting the employees.

3.    Harmonious relationship between employees and manager
Through job evaluation, harmonious and congenial relations can be maintained between employees and management, so that all kinds of salaries controversies can be minimized.

4.    Standardization
 The process of determining the salary differentials for different jobs become standardized through job evaluation. This helps in bringing uniformity into salary structure.

5.    Relevance of new jobs – 
Through job evaluation, one can understand the relative value of new jobs in a concern.

Job evaluation represents an effort to determine the relative value of every job in a plant and to determine what the fair basic wage for such a job should be.
Thus, job evaluation is different from performance appraisal. In job evaluation, worth of a job is calculated while in performance appraisal, the worth of employee is rated.
Employee Stress - Strategies for managing stress at workplace

Employees stress 

It is a growing concern for organizations today. Stress can be defined as a lively circumstance in which people face constraints, opportunities, or loss of something they desire and for which the consequence is both unpredictable as well as crucial. Stress is the response of people to the unreasonable/excessive pressure or demands placed on them.
Stress is not always negative. It may also bring out the best in individuals at times. It may induce an individual to discover innovative and smarter way of doing things. 

This positive dimension of stress is called as en stress. But usually, the term stress has a negative implication and this negative aspect of stress is termed as distress. 


For instance - When a subordinate is harassed or warned by his superior, unhappiness of unsuitable job, etc. We can say that “Stress causes some people to break, and other to break records.”

Symptoms of Stress

Some of the symptoms of stress at workplace are as follows-
  • Absenteeism, escaping from work responsibilities, arriving late, leaving early, etc.
  • Deterioration in work performance, more of error prone work, memory loss, etc.
  • Cribbing, over-reacting, arguing, getting irritated, anxiety, etc.
  • Deteriorating health, more of accidents, etc.
  • Improper eating habits (over-eating or under-eating), excessive smoking and drinking, sleeplessness, etc.
It is thus very essential to have effective stress management strategies in an organization so that the detrimental repercussions of stress on the employees as well as their performance can be reduced and controlled.

Sources/Causes of Stress

The factors leading to stress among individual are called as stressors. Some of the factors/stressors acting on employees are-
1.    Organizational factors- With the growth in organizational stress and complexity, there is increase in organizational factors also which cause stress among employees. Some of such factors are-

·      Discrimination in pay/salary structure
·      Strict rules and regulations
·      Ineffective communication
·      Peer pressure
·      Goals conflicts/goals ambiguity
·      More of centralized and formal organization structure
·      Less promotional opportunities
·      Lack of employee’s participation in decision-making
·      Excessive control over the employees by the managers

Individual factors- 
There are various expectations which the family members, peer, superior and subordinates have from the employee. Failure to understand such expectations or to convey such expectations lead to role ambiguity/role conflict which in turn causes employee stress. Other individual factors causing stress among employees are inherent personality traits such as being impatient, aggressive, rigid, feeling time pressure always, etc. Similarly, the family issues, personal financial problems, sudden career changes all lead to stress.

Job concerning factors- 
Certain factors related to job which cause stress among employees are as follows-
a.     Monotonous nature of job
b.    Unsafe and unhealthy working conditions
c.     Lack of confidentiality
d.    Crowding

Extra-organizational factors- 
There are certain issues outside the organization which lead to stress among employees. In today’s modern and technology savvy world, stress has increased. Inflation, technological change, social responsibilities and rapid social changes are other extra-organizational factors causing stress.

Strategies for Managing Stress

Stress experienced by the employees in their job has negative impact on their health, performance and their behavior in the organization. Thus, stress needs to be managed effectively to set off these harmful consequences. Strategies for managing stress are as follows-


Organizational strategies for managing stress

1.    Encouraging more of organizational communication with the employees so that there is no role ambiguity/conflict. Effective communication can also change employee views. Managers can use better signs and symbols which are not misinterpreted by the employees.
2.    Encourage employees’ participation in decision-making. This will reduce role stress.
3.    Grant the employees greater independence, meaningful and timely feedback, and greater responsibility.
4.    The organizational goals should be realistic, stimulating and particular. The employees must be given feedback on how well they are heading towards these goals.
5.    Encourage decentralization.
6.    Have a fair and just distribution of incentives and salary structure.
7.    Promote job rotation and job enrichment.
8.    Create a just and safe working environment.
9.    Have effective hiring and orientation procedure.
10. Appreciate the employees on accomplishing and over-exceeding their targets.

Individual strategies for managing stress
1.    The employees should make a “to-do” list daily, prioritize the acts in the list and plan the acts accordingly. Take regular breaks during work to relax you. By effective time management, the employees can achieve their targets timely and can meet work pressures and, thus, avoid stress.
2.    Do hard work. Strive to achieve your goals but do not do it to the harm of family, health, or peer.
3.    Indulge in physical exercises. It helps in effective blood circulation, keeps you fit, diverts mind from work pressures.
4.    Encourage a healthy lifestyle. Take a regular sleep, have plenty of water, have healthy eating habits. Promote relaxation techniques such as yoga, listening music and meditation.
5.    The employees should have optimistic approach about their work. They should avoid connections with negative approach employees.
6.    The employees should have emotional intelligence at workplace. They should have self-awareness, self-confidence and self-control at workplace.
7.    The employees should build social support. They should have close connections with trustworthy peer who can listen to their problems and boost their confidence level. This social network will help the employees to overcome stress.
8.    Employee counselling is a very good strategy to overcome employee stress. Through counselling, employees can become aware of their strengths and how to develop those strengths; their weaknesses and how to eliminate them; and they can develop strategies for changing their behavior. Employees are also given career counselling which helps in reducing their ambiguities with regard to career.
9.    Find a fun way to release stress, such as, cracking jokes, playing tennis, golf, etc.
10. Do not remain preoccupied with yourself. Turn your focus outwards. Help others. This will release some stress.

Employee Stress and Performance

Employee Stress is negatively correlated to their work performance. In short, more the level of stress, lower is the performance. It was conventionally perceived that reasonable levels of stress would boost the employees and improve their work performance. But this perception no longer holds true. Today it is believed that even a little bit of stress will inhibit employees’ work performance.
This is due to:
Even relatively slight stress distracts an employee. People facing stress concentrate more on the repulsive feelings and emotions rather than on the work/job at hand and consequently their work performance suffers. Stress affects people’s intellectual, emotional, and interpersonal functioning.
Extended or repeated exposure even to minor levels of stress may have detrimental effects on health and this might lower employee’s work performance.
But there are certain exceptions to the rule that stress interferes with work performance. For instance, some people are at their best in times of calamity / crises. They meet the expectations and show remarkable performance at times of great stress. This may stem out from the fact that they have great expertise in the tasks being performed, making their variation/inflection as very high. People who have exceptional skills and competencies at a task may cognitively evaluate a possibly stressful scenario as a challenge and not as a threat.
Thus, while concluding we can say that whether stress can spoil or increase performance is dependent on factors such as work complication, the skills and expertise of the employee in performing a task, personal traits of individuals/employees involved, etc. Organizations which encourage an open and honest communication develop an environment in which employees are less likely to be stressed out.

Employee Discipline and Features of a Sound Disciplinary System

Discipline means systematically conducting the business by the organizational members who strictly adhere to the essential rules and regulations.
These employees/organizational members work together as a team so as to achieve organizational mission as well as vision and they truly understand that the individual and group aims and desires must be matched so as to ensure organizational success.
A disciplined employee will be organized and an organized employee will be disciplined always. Employee behavior is the base of discipline in an organization. Discipline implies confirming with the code of conduct established by the organization.
Discipline in an organization ensures productivity and efficiency. It encourages harmony and co-operation among employees as well as acts as a morale booster for the employees. In absence of discipline, there will be chaos, confusion, corruption and disobedience in an organization.
In short, discipline implies obedience, orderliness and maintenance of proper subordination among employees.
Work recognition, fair and equitable treatment of employees, appropriate salary structure, effective grievance handling and job-security all contribute to organizational discipline.
Discipline is viewed from two angles/dimensions:
1.    Positive Discipline: 
Positive Discipline implies discipline without punishment. The main aim is to ensure and encourage self-discipline among the employees. The employees in this case identify the group objectives as their own objectives and strive hard to achieve them. The employees follow and adhere to the rules and regulations not due to the fear of punishment but due to the inherent desire to harmonize in achieving organizational goals. Employees exercise self-control to meet these goals.

2.    Negative Discipline: 
Employees adhere to rules and regulations in fear of punishment which may be in form of fines, penalties, demotions or transfers. In this case, the employees do not perceive organizational goals as their own goals. The action taken by the management to ensure desired standard of behavior/code of conduct from the employees in an organization is called negative discipline. The fear of punishment prevents the employees from going off-track.

 

 Characteristics of a Sound Disciplinary System (Red Hot Stove Rule)

Discipline should be imposed without generating resentment. The “red hot stove rule” which says that a sound and effective disciplinary system in an organization should have the following characteristics-
1.    Immediate-
 Just as when you touch a red-hot stove, the burn is immediate, similarly the penalty for violation should be immediate/ immediate disciplinary action must be taken for violation of rules.

2.    Consistent- 
Just as red-hot stove burns everyone in same manner; likewise, there should be high consistency in a sound disciplinary system.

3.    Impersonal- 
Just as a person is burned because he touches the red-hot stove and not because of any personal feelings, likewise, impersonality should be maintained by refraining from personal or subjective feelings.

4.    Prior warning and notice- 
Just as an individual has a warning when he moves closer to the stove that he would be burned on touching it, likewise, a sound disciplinary system should give advance warning to the employees as to the implications of not conforming to the standards of behavior/code of conduct in an organization.

In short, a sound disciplinary system presupposes-
1.    Acquaintance/Knowledge of rules- 
The employees should be aware of the desired code of conduct/ standards of behavior in the organization. This code of discipline should be published in employee handbook.

2.    Timely action- 
Timely inquiry should be conducted for breaking the code of conduct in an organization. The more later the inquiry is made, the more forgetful one becomes and the more he feels that punishment is not deserved.

3.    Fair and just action- 
There should be same punishment for same offence/ misconduct. There should be no favoritism. Discipline should be uniformly enforced always.

4.    Positive approach- The disciplinary system should be preventive and not punitive. Concentrate on preventing misconduct and not on imposing penalties. The employees should not only be explained the reason for actions taken against them but also how such fines and penalties can be avoided in future.

Types of Penalties for Misconduct/Indiscipline

For not following the standards of behavior/code of conduct in an organization, there are two kinds of penalties categorized as-
a.     Major penalties- 
This includes demotion, dismissal, transfer, discharge, withholding increments, etc.

b.    Minor penalties- 
This includes oral warning, written warning, fines, loss of privileges, etc.

















  









  



HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT-KEY RESPONSIBILITIES
Human resource management is concerned with the development of both individuals and the organization in which they operate. HRM, then, is engaged not only in securing and developing the talents of individual workers, but also in implementing programs that enhance communication and cooperation between those individual workers in order to nurture organizational development.The primary responsibilities associated with human resource management include: job analysis and staffing, organization and utilization of work force, measurement and appraisal of work force performance, implementation of reward systems for employees, professional development of workers, and maintenance of work force.
Job analysis consists of determining often with the help of other company areas the nature and responsibilities of
various employment positions. This can encompass determination of the skills and experiences necessary to adequately perform in a position, identification of job and industry trends, and anticipation of future employment levels and skill requirements. "Job analysis is the cornerstone of HRM practice because it provides valid information about jobs that is used to hire and promote people, establish wages, determine training needs, and make other important HRM decisions. Function and Strategy. Staffing, meanwhile, is the actual process of managing the flow of personnel into, within (through transfers and promotions), and out of an organization. Once the recruiting part of the staffing process has been completed, selection is accomplished through job postings, interviews, reference checks, testing, and other tools.
Organization, utilization, and maintenance of a company's work force is another key function of HRM. This involves designing an organizational framework that makes maximum use of an enterprise's human resources and establishing systems of communication that help the organization operate in a unified manner. Other responsibilities in this area include safety and health and worker-management relations. Human resource maintenance activities related to safety and health usually entail compliance with federal laws that protect employees from hazards in the workplace. These regulations are handed down from several federal agencies, including the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and various state agencies, which implement laws in the realms of worker's compensation, employee protection, and other areas. Maintenance tasks related to worker-management relations primarily entail: working with labor unions; handling grievances related to misconduct, such as theft or sexual harassment; and devising communication systems to foster cooperation and a shared sense of mission among employees.
Performance appraisal 
It is the practice of assessing employee job performance and providing feedback to those
Performance appraisal
employees about both positive and negative aspects of their performance. Performance measurements are very important both for the organization and the individual, for they are the primary data used in determining salary increases, promotions, and, in the case of workers who perform unsatisfactorily, dismissal.
Reward systems are typically managed by HR areas as well. This aspect of human resource management is very important, for it is the mechanism by which organizations provide their workers with rewards for past achievements and incentives for high performance in the future. It is also the mechanism by which organizations address problems within their work force, through institution of disciplinary measures. Aligning the work force with company goals, stated Gubman, "requires offering workers an employment relationship that motivates them to take ownership of the business plan.
Employee development 
It is an important training is another vital responsibility of HR personnel. HR is responsible for researching an organization's training needs, and for initiating and evaluating employee development programs designed to address those needs. These training programs can range from orientation programs, which are designed to acclimate new hires to the company, to ambitious education programs intended to familiarize workers with a new software system.
After getting the right talent into the organization,the second traditional challenge to human resources is to align the workforce with the business-;to constantly build the capacity of the workforce to execute the business plan." This is done through performance appraisals, training, and other activities. In the realm of performance appraisal, HRM professionals must devise uniform appraisal standards, develop review techniques, train managers to administer the appraisals, and then evaluate and follow up on the effectiveness of performance reviews. They must also tie the appraisal process into compensation and incentive strategies, and work to ensure that federal regulations are observed.
Responsibilities associated with training and development activities, meanwhile, include the determination, design, execution, and analysis of educational programs. The HRM professional should be aware of the fundamentals of learning and motivation, and must carefully design and monitor training and development programs that benefit the overall organization as well as the individual. The importance of this aspect of a business's operation can hardly be overstated. The quality of employees and their development through training and education are major factors in determining long-term profitability of a small business.Research has shown specific benefits that a small business receives from training and developing its workers, including increased productivity; reduced employee turnover increased efficiency resulting in financial gains decreased need for supervision.
Meaningful contributions to business processes are increasingly recognized as within the purview of active human resource management practices. Of course, human resource managers have always contributed to overall business processes in certain respects by disseminating guidelines for and monitoring employee behavior, for instance, or ensuring that the organization is obeying worker-related regulatory guidelines. Now, increasing numbers of businesses are incorporating human resource managers into other business processes as well. In the past, human resource managers were cast in a support role in which their thoughts on cost/benefit justifications and other operational aspects of the business were rarely solicited. But as Johnston noted, the changing character of business structures and the marketplace are making it increasingly necessary for business owners and executives to pay greater attention to the human resource aspects of operation: "Tasks that were once neatly slotted into well-defined and narrow job descriptions have given way to broad job descriptions or role definitions. In some cases, completely new work relationships have developed; telecommuting, permanent part-time roles and outsourcing major non-strategic functions are becoming more frequent." All of these changes, which human resource managers are heavily involved in, are important factors in shaping business performance.
THE CHANGING FIELD OF HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
In recent years, several business trends have had a significant impact on the broad field of HRM. Chief among them was new technologies. These new technologies, particularly in the areas of electronic communication and information dissemination and retrieval, have dramatically altered the business landscape. Satellite communications, computers and networking systems, fax machines, and other devices have all facilitated change in the ways in which businesses interact with each other and their workers. Telecommuting, for instance, has become a very popular option for many workers, and HRM professionals have had to develop new guidelines for this emerging subset of employees.
Changes in organizational structure have also influenced the changing face of human resource management. Continued erosion in manufacturing industries in the United States and other nations, coupled with the rise in service industries in those countries, have changed the workplace, as has the decline in union representation in many industries (these two trends, in fact, are commonly viewed as interrelated). In addition, organizational philosophies have undergone change. Many companies have scrapped or adjusted their traditional, hierarchical organizational structures in favor of flatter management structures. HRM experts note that this shift in responsibility brought with it a need to reassess job descriptions, appraisal systems, and other elements of personnel management.
A third change factor has been accelerating market globalization. This phenomenon has served to increase competition for both customers and jobs. The latter development enabled some businesses to demand higher performances from their employees while holding the line on compensation. Other factors that have changed the nature of HRM in recent years include new management and operational theories like Total Quality Management (TQM), rapidly changing demographics, and changes in health insurance and federal and state employment legislation.
SMALL BUSINESS AND HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
A small business's human resource management needs are not of the same size or complexity of those of a large firm. Nonetheless, even a business that carries only two or three employees faces important personnel management issues. Indeed, the stakes are very high in the world of small business when it comes to employee recruitment and management. No business wants an employee who is lazy or incompetent or dishonest. But a small business with a work force of half a dozen people will be hurt far more by such an employee than will a company with a work force that numbers in the hundreds (or thousands). Nonetheless, "most small business employers have no formal training in how to make hiring decisions,In Human Resources: Mastering Your Small Business.Most have no real sense of the time it takes nor the costs involved. All they know is that they need help in the form of a 'good' sales manager, a 'good' secretary, a 'good' welder, and so on. And they know they need someone they can work with, who is willing to put in the time to learn the business and do the job. It sounds simple, but it isn't."Before hiring a new employee, the small business owner should weigh several considerations. The first step the small business owner should take when pondering an expansion of employee payroll is to honestly assess the status of the organization itself. Are current employees being utilized appropriately? Are current production methods effective? Can the needs of the business be met through an arrangement with an outside contractor or some other means? Are you, as the owner, spending your time appropriately? As noted, "any personnel change should be considered an opportunity for rethinking your organizational structure."
Small businesses also need to match the talents of prospective employees with the company's needs. Efforts to manage this can be accomplished in a much more effective fashion if the small business owner devotes energy to defining the job and actively taking part in the recruitment process. But the human resource management task does not end with the creation of a detailed job description and the selection of a suitable employee. Indeed, the hiring process marks the beginning of HRM for the small business owner.
Small business consultants strongly urge even the most modest of business enterprises to implement and document policies regarding human resource issues. "Few small enterprises can afford even a fledgling personnel department during the first few years of business operation," acknowledged. "Nevertheless, a large mass of personnel forms and data generally accumulates rather rapidly from the very beginning. To hold problems to a minimum, specific personnel policies should be established as early as possible.These become useful guides in all areas: recruitment and selection, compensation plan and employee benefits, training, promotions and terminations, and the like.Depending on the nature of the business enterprise (and the owner's own comfort zone), the owner can even involve his employees in this endeavor. In any case, a carefully considered employee handbook or personnel manual can be an invaluable tool in ensuring that the small business owner and his or her employees are on the same page. Moreover, a written record can lend a small business some protection in the event that its management or operating procedures are questioned in the legal arena.
Some small business owners also need to consider training and other development needs in managing their enterprise's employees. The need for such educational supplements can range dramatically. A bakery owner, for instance, may not need to devote much of his resources to employee training, but a firm that provides electrical wiring services to commercial clients may need to implement a system of continuing education for its workers in order to remain viable.
Finally, the small business owner needs to establish and maintain a productive working atmosphere for his or her work force. Employees are far more likely to be productive assets to your company if they feel that they are treated fairly. The small business owner who clearly communicates personal expectations and company goals, provides adequate compensation, offers meaningful opportunities for career advancement, anticipates work force training and developmental needs, and provides meaningful feedback to his or her employees is far more likely to be successful than the owner who is neglectful in any of these areas.
HRMS or HRIS?
The term HRMS is sometimes used synonymous with HRIS (Human Resource Information System), but a HRIS is really a type of HRMS. Functionally, however, there is no real difference in the type of systems offered going by one title or the other. At one time, a HRMS was a more complete automated solution to human resources management than software labeled as HRIS or even HCM, but re branding by many companies has worked to make the different software titles generally indistinguishable.
HR FunctionsFunctions of HRMS Systems
Managing payroll
Recruitment and on boarding
Gathering, storing, and accessing employee information
Keeping attendance records and tracking absenteeism
Performance evaluation
Benefits administration
Learning management
Employee self-service
Employee scheduling
Analytics and informed decision making

The function of the human resources department involves tracking employee histories, skills, abilities, salaries, and accomplishments. Replacing certain processes with various levels of HRMS systems can distribute information management responsibilities so that the bulk of information gathering is not delegated strictly to HR. 
By allowing employees to update personal information and perform other tasks, information is kept more accurate and HR professionals are not bogged down.Each module performs a separate function within the HRMS that helps with information gathering or tracking.
Employee management is really hard. A recent poll found that only 35% of American managers are engaged with their jobs, costing the U.S. economy nearly $400 billion every year.The failure to motivate employees makes an even more searing impact on your work as a manager. Instead of leading a balanced team, you’re immersed in an uphill battle to meet numbers and close deals.As the future of work continues to shift, your employee management techniques can evolve with it, rebooting your approach to an already challenging job. Even the best managers can benefit from taking time to fine-tune their approaches. With that in mind, here are our best results-driven tips, tricks and ideas for improving your employee management skills.
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Offer Flexibility
Employee flexibility is one of the best indicators of a happy workplace. More than the need for any other perk, employees want to be able to follow the beat of their own drum — create their own schedule, work remotely, and take on additional projects in line with their abilities and interests.As important as flexibility is in a workplace, it’s not that easy for employees to ask for. According to a survey of working adults conducted by Harris Interactive, 47% of respondents feel that asking for flexible options would negatively affects advancement opportunities. Instead of requiring that your employees come to you with requests, ask them about their ideal work situation and make it happen.If you decide to embrace remote work, use some cool communication applications like slackAsana and Trello  to manage projects and open communication channels. The flexibility you give employees should accompany tried-and-true methods for collaboration and accountability. Play with a couple different apps to find your perfect fit.
Improve Transparency
Would you trust someone who intentionally withheld important information from you? In a workforce where 25% of employees do not trust their employer, transparency needs to be a priority.Maintaining a posture of openness sets a precedent for candor and authenticity in communication. Research conducted by Dan Cable at the London Business School found that when workers can express their “authentic selves,” they experienced increased individual performance, a willingness to help others and higher levels of organizational commitment.Experts believe that transparency not only fosters a intentional work environment, it gives employees necessary context for their decisions as team members. Routine problem solving becomes an easier and more efficient endeavor when people have all of the necessary information.Mutual understanding of your company’s goals and higher purpose also boosts engagement at work, improving the focus of your employees. By fostering an open dialogue, you build seamless connections between yourself and your employees while endearing your team to a larger mission.

Human Resource Functions

Human Resource Management 
(HRM):
HRM is the term used to describe formal systems devised for the management of people within an organization. The responsibilities of a human resource manager fall into three major areas: staffing, employee compensation and benefits, and defining/designing work.
Responsibilities of HR Manager:
The responsibilities of a human resource manager fall into three major areas: staffing, employee compensation and benefits, and defining/designing work. Essentially, the purpose of HRM is to maximize the productivity of an organization by optimizing the effectiveness of its employees. This mandate is unlikely to change in any fundamental way, despite the ever-increasing pace of change in the business world.Hiring the right people-;and training them well-;can often mean the difference between scratching out the barest of livelihoods and steady business growth'¦. Personnel problems do not discriminate between small and big business. You find them in all businesses, regardless of size."
PRINCIPLES OF HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
Business consultants note that modern human resource management is guided by several overriding principles. Perhaps the paramount principle is a simple recognition that human resources are the most important assets of an organization; a business cannot be successful without effectively managing this resource.Business success "is most likely to be achieved if the personnel policies and procedures of the enterprise are closely linked with, and make a major contribution to, the achievement of corporate objectives and strategic plans." A third guiding principle, similar in scope, holds that it is the HR's responsibility to find, secure, guide, and develop employees whose talents and desires are compatible with the operating needs and future goals of the company. Other HRM factors that shape corporate culture-;whether by encouraging integration and cooperation across the company, instituting quantitative performance measurements, or taking some other action-;are also commonly cited as key components in business success.
POSITION AND STRUCTURE OF HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
Human resource department responsibilities can be subdivided into three areas: individual, organizational, and career. Individual management entails helping employees identify their strengths and weaknesses; correct their shortcomings; and make their best contribution to the enterprise. These duties are carried out through a variety of activities such as performance reviews, training, and testing. Organizational development, meanwhile, focuses on fostering a successful system that maximizes human (and other) resources as part of larger business strategies. This important duty also includes the creation and maintenance of a change program, which allows the organization to respond to evolving outside and internal influences. Finally, there is the responsibility of managing career development. This entails matching individuals with the most suitable jobs and career paths within the organization.Human resource management functions are ideally positioned near the theoretic center of the organization, with access to all areas of the business. Since the HRM department or manager is charged with managing the productivity and development of workers at all levels, human resource personnel should have access to-;and the support of-;key decision makers. In addition, the HRM department should be situated in such a way that it is able to communicate effectively with all areas of the company.
HRM structures vary widely from business to business, shaped by the type, size, and governing philosophies of the organization that they serve. But most organizations organize HRM functions around the clusters of people to be helped-;they conduct recruiting, administrative, and other duties in a central location. Different employee development groups for each department are necessary to train and develop employees in specialized areas, such as sales, engineering, marketing, or executive education. In contrast, some HRM departments are completely independent and are organized purely by function. The same training department, for example, serves all divisions of the organization.
In recent years, however, observers have cited a decided trend toward fundamental reassessments of human resources structures and positions. "A cascade of changing business conditions, changing organizational structures, and changing leadership has been forcing human resource departments to alter their perspectives on their role and function almost overnight," wrote John Johnston in Business Quarterly. "Previously, companies structured themselves on a centralized and compartmentalized basis-;head office, marketing, manufacturing, shipping, etc. They now seek to decentralize and to integrate their operations, developing cross-functional teams.Today, senior management expects HR to move beyond its traditional, compartmentalized 'bunker' approach to a more integrated, decentralized support function." Given this change in expectations, Johnston noted that "an increasingly common trend in human resources is to decentralize the HR function and make it accountable to specific line management. This increases the likelihood that HR is viewed and included as an integral part of the business process, similar to its marketing, finance, and operations counterparts. However, HR will retain a centralized functional relationship in areas where specialized expertise is truly required," such as compensation and recruitment responsibilities.
                 
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