Human Resources Management
Subject: Business Studies
Topic: 5
Cambridge Code: 0264 / 0450 / 7115
HRM Functions
Human Resources Management (HRM) - Managing people effectively
Key Areas
- Recruitment - Hiring right people
- Training - Developing skills
- Motivation - Encouraging performance
- Appraisal - Evaluating performance
- Compensation - Paying fairly
- Relations - Labor relations
Recruitment Process
Steps
1. Job Analysis
- Identify needs
- Define role requirements
- Determine salary level
2. Advertising
- Job boards (online, newspaper)
- Agency (recruitment specialists)
- Direct approach (from competitors)
- Internal (promotion)
3. Shortlisting
- Review applications
- Select candidates for interview
- Check qualifications
4. Interview
- Assessment of suitability
- Ask role-specific questions
- Evaluate enthusiasm
- Check communication skills
5. Testing
- Aptitude tests (ability)
- Psychometric (personality, values)
- Technical (job-specific skills)
- Work samples
6. Selection
- Choose best candidate
- Reference checks (previous employers)
- Medical examination
- Offer contract
Recruitment Methods
| Method | Advantage | Disadvantage |
|---|---|---|
| Job boards | Reach many candidates | Anonymous, high volume |
| Agencies | Professional selection | Expensive, less control |
| Internal | Known quality, motivation | Limited talent pool |
| Headhunting | Targeted, experienced | Very expensive |
Motivation Theories
Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
- Physiological - Food, water, shelter
- Safety - Security, stability
- Social - Belonging, relationships
- Esteem - Recognition, respect
- Self-actualization - Goals, potential
Application: Satisfy lower levels before upper levels
Herzberg's Two-Factor Theory
Hygiene Factors (prevent dissatisfaction):
- Pay, working conditions
- Job security, supervision
Motivators (create satisfaction):
- Achievement, recognition
- Responsibility, growth
Application: Remove negatives AND add positives
McGregor's Theory X and Y
Theory X: Workers dislike work
- Coercive management (threat)
- Close supervision
Theory Y: Workers enjoy work
- Participative management
- Trust and empowerment
Motivation Methods
Financial Incentives
Wages/Salaries:
- Basic income
- Security and stability
Bonuses:
- Performance-based reward
- Tied to targets
Piece Rates:
- Pay per unit produced
- Encourages productivity
Profit Sharing:
- Share company profits
- Aligns interests
Non-Financial Methods
Job Enrichment:
- More responsibility
- Varied tasks
- Development opportunity
Job Enlargement:
- More tasks (same level)
- Reduces boredom
- Develops flexibility
Empowerment:
- Delegate decision-making
- Trust in workers
- Increases ownership
Recognition:
- Praise, awards
- Public acknowledgment
- Low cost impact
Training and Development
Training Types
Induction: New employee orientation
- Company knowledge
- Role training
- Meet team
On-the-job: Training while working
- Practical skills
- Immediate application
- Experienced trainer
Off-the-job: Formal training away from work
- Classroom, workshops
- External specialists
- Structured learning
Apprenticeship: Long-term skill development
- Combination on/off job
- Qualification-based
- Entry level
Benefits
- Productivity increase - Better skills
- Quality improvement - Fewer errors
- Morale boost - Feel valued
- Adaptability - Respond to change
- Promotion pipeline - Internal advancement
Performance Appraisal
Appraisal - Formal evaluation of performance
Methods
Annual Review:
- Once per year
- Comprehensive assessment
- Set future goals
Continuous Monitoring:
- Regular feedback
- Immediate issues addressed
- Development focus
360-Degree Feedback:
- Feedback from manager, peers, subordinates
- Comprehensive view
- Less manager bias
Appraisal Outcomes
- Performance pay increase - Links reward to performance
- Promotion planning - Identify potential
- Training needs - Development areas
- Dismissal - Poor performance documentation
- Career planning - Future direction
Labor Turnover
Labor turnover =
Problems with High Turnover
- Recruitment costs - Replacing people
- Training costs - New employee induction
- Productivity loss - Reduced during transition
- Knowledge loss - Experience leaves
- Customer service loss - Relationship interruption
Causes
- Poor management
- Low pay
- Limited prospects
- Poor working conditions
- Lack of recognition
- Better opportunities elsewhere
Reducing Turnover
- Improve pay/conditions
- Career development
- Recognition programs
- Better management
- Team building
Workforce Planning
Workforce planning - Future human resource needs
Process
- Analyze current
- Number, skills, age
- Turnover patterns
- Succession issues
- Forecast demand
- Expansion plans
- Technology changes
- Market growth
- Identify gaps
- Skills deficiencies
- Staff shortages
- Surplus in areas
- Plan action
- Recruitment strategy
- Training programs
- Redundancy plans
Key Points
- HRM: Recruitment, training, motivation, appraisal
- Recruitment: Systematic multi-step process
- Motivation: Hygiene factors + motivators
- Training: Develops skills and morale
- Appraisal: Evaluates and plans development
- Turnover: High turnover costly
- Workforce planning: Future-focused strategy
Practice Questions
- Design recruitment process
- Compare motivation theories
- Calculate labor turnover
- Propose motivation strategy
- Analyze training effectiveness
- Create workforce development plan
Revision Tips
- Learn recruitment stages
- Know motivation theories
- Understand training types
- Appraisal methods
- Calculate turnover
- Know labor laws basics
- Relate HRM to business strategy