Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Human resource planning
Anmerkungen:
-
–systematically identifies what must be
done to guarantee the availability of the human resources required by an
organisation to meet business objectives.
- systematically identifies what must be done to guarantee the
availability of the human resources required by an organisation to
meet business objectives.
- HR planning issues
- Scarcity of talent
- Balancing short and long-term needs
- Globalisation
- Multigenerational workforce
- Women in the workforce
- Academic standards
- Forecasting
- demand for human resources within the organisation
- supply of external human resources to the organisation
- supply of human resources available within the organisation
- Approaches to HR planning
- Quantitative methods
- Use statistical and mathematical techniques
Mainly used by theoreticians and professional
HR planners in large organisations.
- Trend analysis
Also called Time
Series Analysis.
Makes
predictions by
projecting past
and present
trends into the
future.
- Econometric modelling and
multiple predictive techniques
Complex computer models which
simulate future events based on
probabilities and multiple
assumptions.
- Turnover analysis Detailed examination as
to why people leave an organisation (for
example: retirement, resignation, illness,
retrenchment, termination).
- Markov analysis A
mathematical technique
used to forecast the
availability of internal job
applicants.
- Qualitative methods
- Use expert opinion (usually a line manager) to
predict future needs and actions Focus on
evaluations of employee performance,
promotability and development.
- Expert opinion
Usually the line
manager.
- Delphi technique
Independent, anonymous
decision making, followed
by collation of results and
redistribution of
information until
consensus is reached.
- Nominal group technique Independent
ideas generation, presentation to the
group and ranking of options.
- Skills inventory - Consolidates information
about all employees to identify those
suitable for opportunities and assess short
and long-term organisational
requirements.
- Replacement charts
Visual representations of
present incumbents and
potential replacements
(or lack thereof) for given
positions. See next slide.
- Succession planning
- external trends
- The ageing population
- Increase in female participation rates
- Immigration changes
- Casualisation of the workforce
- Contingent worker =
temporary or part-time
- Outsourcing
- Subcontracting work to an outside
company that specialises in and is more
efficient at doing that kind of work.
International outsourcing is called
offshoring.
- Exit management
- Procedural justice: Process must be perceived by
the management, employees and unions as fair,
acceptable
- Distributive justice: Termination
package must be perceived by all
parties as fair and equitable
- Interactional justice: Terminated
employees must be treated with dignity
and respect