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Human Resource Management in the Public Sector PP530-01 Instructor: Trebor Negron Unit 8 Seminar 4/18/2012 8:00 – 9:00 PM, EST
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Recruiting, Selecting Employees, and Training the Workforce
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Human Resource Planning Process used to ensure that an org has the “right” people when needed Right number With right skills Failure to plan has sig. financial costs Forecast future labor demand Forecast future labor supply Compare forecasted supply and demand
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Human Resource Supply and Demand
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The Hiring Process Three components in hiring process:
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Costs of Turnover Above average employee worth about 40% more than average employee Turnover costs about 25% of salary Costs both direct and indirect Major costs include: Separation Recruitment Selection Hiring Productivity
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Challenges in the Hiring Process What characteristics most important? How do you measure the characteristics? How do you account for motivation? Performance = ability x motivation Context dependent Who makes the hiring decision?
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Recruitment A “sales activity” Sources of recruiting Current employees Referrals from current employees Former employees Former military Customers
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Recruitment Sources of Recruiting (continued) Print and radio advertisements Internet advertising and career sites Employment agencies Temporary workers College recruiting Nontraditional Recruiting
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Recruitment Internal vs. External Recruiting External—fresh perspectives Is learning curve associated with new hires Internal—less costly Signals opportunity to workforce May not have as many new ideas Evaluating recruiting sources Cost of sources? How long do employees recruited from different sources stay?
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Recruitment Planning recruitment efforts Should be tied to HRP How many candidates to attract? Depends on Yield ratios Applicant to Interview Interview to Offer Offer to Acceptance Recruiting protected classes Target potential recruits through media that focuses on minorities
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Selection Reliability— consistency of measurement Across time and judges Almost always involves “noise” Validity—does the device do what you want? Content—degree which selection device measures actual job content Empirical—measures relationship between selection device and job performance
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Selection Tools Letters of recommendation Poor predictors of job performance Look at traits instead of tone Application forms Ability tests Cognitive and Physical ability tests Work Sample Honesty tests Psychology tests
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Selection Tools Personality tests Extroversion Agreeableness Conscientiousness Emotional stability Openness to experience
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Selection Tools Interviews Structured Interview
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Selection Tools Assessment centers Usually for managerial positions In basket exercise Drug tests Reference checks Background checks Handwriting analysis
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Selection Reactions to Selection Devices Applicant reactions to selection devices Prefer job simulations and interview Dislike personality and cognitive ability tests Manager reaction to selection systems Little research Need devices that are quick, easy to administer and easy to interpret
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Legal Issues in Staffing Discrimination Laws Develop clear policies for Hiring, disciplining and dismissing employees Affirmative Action Not just for govt. and govt. contractors Can apply if guilty of discrimination Negligent Hiring Learn as much as possible about past work-related behavior
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Key Training Issues How can training keep pace with a changing organizational environment? Should training take place in a classroom or on the job? How can training be delivered effectively, worldwide? How can training be delivered so that trainees are motivated to learn?
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Training vs. Development Training—provide employees With specific skills, or Help correct deficiencies in performance Development—effort to provide abilities the organization will need in the future
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Challenges in Training Is training the solution to the problem? Are training goals clear and realistic? Is training a good investment? Will the training work? Must flow from strategic goals
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Transfer of Training: From Learning to Doing Teach others what you learned Assign yourself homework Set goals that apply the lessons Develop your own job aids Get a training partner Ask for help
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The Training Process
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Needs Assessment Organizational Analysis— identify: Organizational needs Level of support for training Task Needs—examine job to be performed Based on job analysis Identify needed KSAs Person Needs Which employees need training?
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Clarifying Training Objectives Develop set of objectives Relate objectives to KSAs From assessment phase State in behavioral terms Make objectives as specific as possible Use objectives to assess effectiveness
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Training and Conduct Phase Location Options—On the Job Job rotation, Apprenticeships and Internships Is job relevant Can be costly Quality varies substantially Location Options—Off the Job Good if need uninterrupted period In environment conducive to learning May not transfer back to job
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Training and Conduct Phase Presentation Options: Slides and Videotapes Teletraining Computers Simulations Virtual Reality Classroom Instruction and Role-plays
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Types of Training Skills Training Retraining Job Training Partnership Act Cross-Functional Training Team Training Content tasks Group Processes Virtual team training
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Types of Training Continued Literacy Training Diversity Training Crisis Training Ethics Training Customer Service Training Creativity Training
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Brainstorming
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The Evaluation Phase Important but often overlooked Does training result in attaining a goal? Four Level Framework for Evaluation: Reaction of trainees How much trainees learn Post-training behavior Results of training (financial value: ROI)
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Legal Issues in Training Subject to anti-discrimination laws Employees must have access to training and development programs In a nondiscriminatory fashion Job-relevance is valid defense
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Orientation and Socialization Orientation—inform new employees about Organizational policies and procedures What is expected of them Socialization—helps acclimate employees Anticipatory stage Encounter Settling in
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Summary and Conclusions HR Planning is essential Many challenges in the hiring process Each step of hiring process must be managed Recruiting – look everywhere! Training—provides specific skills Is training the appropriate fix? Are goals of training clear? Don’t forget evaluation phase Pay attention to socialization Better workplace outcomes
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Questions/Concerns?
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